Boarworld
Junior Guinea Pig
Does anyone have any suggestions (unlikely) how I can help stop my daft as a broom piggy (age 9m) from burrowing and using her face to rummage massively in the hay pile? Or alternately different hay that has bigger ‘pieces’?
My three girls have a huge pile of fresh hay every day, for food and for enrichment. I have been buying Pillow Wad Meadow Hay for ages, no issues but it does seem a bit finer recently.
Piggy was fine as far as I was aware until this afternoon. Eating and drinking normally, wheeking when the fridge opens, etc. My eldest got home from school (the pigs very caring ‘owner’ though of course I’m actually responsible for their care) and noticed she wasn’t herself and that she had a bit of a squinty eye. I had a close look and sure enough, she did. A bit squinty and when I gently looked under her eyelid it seemed swollen.
Managed to get her to the vet within the hour. She was examined (in good health generally and has gained weight since the last weigh in she’s 1075g at 9m). The vet had a look, could see ‘something’ not right, then put coloured drops in her eye to look under blue light and there it was. A huge ulcer in her eyeball. Poor little mite! She was so good being examined too, likely frozen due to fear response but still.
She had some numbing cream on her eye and a good sterile eyewash to try and flush anything foreign out - nothing. At which point I’m starting to get a bit concerned that something more serious was underlying.
Final attempt to see if there was a more innocent explanation and I had to look away, but the vet used tweezers to look under her extra eyelid and around the eyeball. There it was, a flipping piece of hay about 5mm long. Must’ve been there a while to cause an ulcer.
Anyhow, she’s had a big injection of metacam to cover the next 24h, then I will give it orally for the next 7 days. She also has antibiotic cream for her eye for me to put on 3x daily for the next week, then it’s back to the vets to check that it’s cleared, or at least is clearing, up.
So - given that I need to give them loads of fresh hay and I don’t use hay racks is there anything I can do except for switch the hay? Unless anyone has any suggestions to train her into not going in like a loon with her eyes wide open then it seems a different sort of hay is the only option!
Also the vet said on examination that her teeth are a little bit long. Not to the point that she needs them trimming (yet) but she said if she’s eating loads of hay which she is then they should be wearing down a bit more. So I’m wondering if she needs something more robust.
£138 later and she’ll be fine, but don’t want her or the others to hurt themselves again. Will also be taking the other two to the vet later this week for a tooth check and general once over.
She seems to have recovered from her rather grim ordeal and is currently enjoying her position of spoiled Queen, in the special bed my eldest has made for her (made of her cuddle cup, with a hidey on top) munching on dandelion leaves!
My three girls have a huge pile of fresh hay every day, for food and for enrichment. I have been buying Pillow Wad Meadow Hay for ages, no issues but it does seem a bit finer recently.
Piggy was fine as far as I was aware until this afternoon. Eating and drinking normally, wheeking when the fridge opens, etc. My eldest got home from school (the pigs very caring ‘owner’ though of course I’m actually responsible for their care) and noticed she wasn’t herself and that she had a bit of a squinty eye. I had a close look and sure enough, she did. A bit squinty and when I gently looked under her eyelid it seemed swollen.
Managed to get her to the vet within the hour. She was examined (in good health generally and has gained weight since the last weigh in she’s 1075g at 9m). The vet had a look, could see ‘something’ not right, then put coloured drops in her eye to look under blue light and there it was. A huge ulcer in her eyeball. Poor little mite! She was so good being examined too, likely frozen due to fear response but still.
She had some numbing cream on her eye and a good sterile eyewash to try and flush anything foreign out - nothing. At which point I’m starting to get a bit concerned that something more serious was underlying.
Final attempt to see if there was a more innocent explanation and I had to look away, but the vet used tweezers to look under her extra eyelid and around the eyeball. There it was, a flipping piece of hay about 5mm long. Must’ve been there a while to cause an ulcer.
Anyhow, she’s had a big injection of metacam to cover the next 24h, then I will give it orally for the next 7 days. She also has antibiotic cream for her eye for me to put on 3x daily for the next week, then it’s back to the vets to check that it’s cleared, or at least is clearing, up.
So - given that I need to give them loads of fresh hay and I don’t use hay racks is there anything I can do except for switch the hay? Unless anyone has any suggestions to train her into not going in like a loon with her eyes wide open then it seems a different sort of hay is the only option!
Also the vet said on examination that her teeth are a little bit long. Not to the point that she needs them trimming (yet) but she said if she’s eating loads of hay which she is then they should be wearing down a bit more. So I’m wondering if she needs something more robust.
£138 later and she’ll be fine, but don’t want her or the others to hurt themselves again. Will also be taking the other two to the vet later this week for a tooth check and general once over.
She seems to have recovered from her rather grim ordeal and is currently enjoying her position of spoiled Queen, in the special bed my eldest has made for her (made of her cuddle cup, with a hidey on top) munching on dandelion leaves!