Sawdust
Well, as is often the case with new owners, we gave sawdust a go. After a week I decided enough was enough. Binky kept eating it, Errol kept getting it in his bum and the carpet was no longer visible because of all of the sawdust which was being kicked out!
Fleece
Next, we moved onto fleece. This is basically cheap fleeces that have been wicked (washed 4-5 times with detergent but not softener) before use. We’ve used fleeces right up until yesterday and they have been okay. The main issue has been that are not made to measure and are not amazing at keep the pigs dry and smell-free. They were MUCH better than sawdust though.
Liners
On Tuesday night, my custom made cage liners arrived from pawsup4cosypets and already it’s making a huge difference.
If you’re not familiar with cage liners, the most common type and the ones I have are fleece, then wadding, then fleece all stitched together. As pawsup puts it:
“They are made from double layered fleece with an inner core of polyester wadding. This design allows moisture to soak through leaving the surface, and your pets, dry.”
Ease of Use
Firstly, don’t underestimate how amazing made-to-measure products are! Instead of stretching fleeces, tucking them under the cage corner, having to get Henry to lift up whilst I crawl under the upper floor, they just slot right in. Easy as that! No faffing. Just make sure you measure up correctly.
Comfort
The liners are 3-4 inches thick and my pigs love them. When I first put them down they were both running around squeaking so excitedly. Binky has since been sprawling out as much as possible – I think it is soft on his tummy and kind on his older-piggy joints! Errol has been charging around like there’s no tomorrow!
The wadding in the middle makes a big difference, especially to older piggies. Binky has trouble with wetting himself – Errol moves but Binky will sit unaware in his own wee – and so dryness is a very important factor. The fleece wicks away the liquid but instead of it then sitting just underneath and the pigs walking on damp fleece, the wadding absorbs it. Binky’s bum is beautifully dry!
Washing
They are of course machine washable. No fabric softner of course (did you know that’s what stops your towels being as absorbent as when you first got them?!) but detergent is fine. I think, in hindsight, several smaller liners would have been easier to wash rather than one massive one, essentially a duvet… but hey, we’ll see!
All in all, we’re happy and the pigs are happy – huzzah!