My guinea pig hates me!?

Briana Rose

Junior Guinea Pig
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When I first got my guinea pigs I saw that Feta (shown in picture) was a very outgoing and happy guinea pig, but over time he seemed to start resenting me?
I really try to spend time with them when I am not working on commissions or busy with family... Do some guinea pigs and owners just not click? :^(
 
How old is he? I had a similar thing with one of my girls. I was bonding with her and then suddenly she didn’t want to be picked up or anything. I think it was when she went through her “teenage” phase. She is the most cuddly little guinea pig now though.
 
Guinea pigs can take time ot settle and get used to new people and surroundings.
How long have you had Feta and does she live with another guinea pig?

Some guinea pigs will simply never be 'cuddly' pets,and sometimes we need to accept that.
However there is lots you can do to help foster a positive relationship between you and your piggies.
These threads have lots of good tips:
Settling In And Making Friends With Guinea Pigs - A Guide
 
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When I first got my guinea pigs I saw that Feta (shown in picture) was a very outgoing and happy guinea pig, but over time he seemed to start resenting me?
I really try to spend time with them when I am not working on commissions or busy with family... Do some guinea pigs and owners just not click? :^(

Hi!

Please take the time to read this guide here. Feta is not hating you; instead he moved from being outright frightened to trust you enough to tell you how he feels. the guide shows you how you can use piggy whispering tricks to tell him that you want him to a member of your group and that you love him. Communicating in ways that he'll instinctively understands and giving him this sense of belonging and being welcome will help to speed up the process of building up trust. Please accept though that pet shop guinea pigs are prey animals with hardly any friendly human interaction before they are being thrust into the completely alien world of a home where they are expected to be instant animated cuddly toys. It doesn't work like that. In order to build up trust you need to see things from the perspective of a prey animal, avoid predatory hunting behaviours and allow trust to make deep roots before it can grow up and flourish. A few weeks is not enough.
Understanding Prey Animal Instincts, Guinea Pig Whispering And Cuddling Tips

This guide is part of our wider new owners guide collection, which specifically addresses all the areas we get the most questions and concerns about from new owners. They are both practical and as precise as we can make them. You will hopefully find them both helpful and interesting to help smooth your way to a successful and happy ownership!
Getting Started - New Owners' Most Helpful Guides
 
Thank you all so much! I will make sure to read more into it with the help of the links you gave me!
I sadly don't know Feta's exact age but I know he is an adult :^)
 
Thank you all so much! I will make sure to read more into it with the help of the links you gave me!
I sadly don't know Feta's exact age but I know he is an adult :^)

It very much depends on what his previous homes have been like, but with some patience and persistence and with making an effortto speak his language you will get there eventually. It is often not a quick process, but so much more special when you have this precious moment that you know your piggy is trusting you implicitly!
 
If I thought about things in that way I would be sure our most recent addition Blodwen "hates" me, as she arrived very scared after very little human interaction and then got immediately quarantined with ringworm and I was the person who rubbed nasty stuff in her fur twice a day! But she is very happy and confident with her other piggy friends who know I can open the fridge for veggie snacks, and now Blodwen will now take food from my hand or off my jumper as long as we both look away and pretend we havent seen each other :)
I'm happy that Blodwen is happy, these things take time and now she is starting to see me as a coriander dispenser not an antifungal spray demon. Not all piggies need or want human company, which is fine if they have other piggy friends to play with and talk to- maybe if you are more relaxed about your piggy interactions your piggy will sense this and relax too, especially if you are offering coriander in a slightly bored way like you haven't noticed he's there, rather than being too anxious for cuddles!
 
On harder to "accept you" gp, figure out which vegetable they LOVE (lettuce works great and is one of the first things they'll eat w/o questioning when young, though have to moderate it as some might get the runs) and have it set aside. Put the gp on your lap or chest if almost laying flat, then say whatever "phrase" you use when giving "treats" and ONLY that phrase (no "I love you" or anything else it might associate with other events if you say them routinely; keep it simple and focused). If no phrase/word, quickly invent one.

Wait until it calms (NO teeth chatter or vocal whining as you don't want that reinforced) which is ideally when they actually lay down on you vs. standing up. Say the word/phrase, then give it the lettuce. WHILE it's eating the lettuce, REPEAT the phrase/word, THEN pet it's head/nose only. As time goes on (talking days/weeks, depending on the pig) you can try petting more areas. I avoid this on friendly pigs as I don't want to have them rely on being given something, but harder to tame pigs this works with getting their acceptance going and guard down. Once the lettuce is gone, can say something like "Wanna go back?" then w/o saying ANYTHING ELSE put them back in the cage. This teaches them being handled is OK, and being put back is viewed as another reward at the end of it.

Also, pay attention to anything "odd" the pig does. Example: My Griffinia when being asked "Do you want to go back to your cage?" she'll ALWAYS put her right paw forward. It was a bit of luck and timing that this first happened, and was reinforced by me. I then noticed after putting her on my lap, after a minute or two, she'd start doing the thing with her paw w/o my asking it. So she's clearly conveying a message but it's very subltle. I'll ignore it though UNTIL I actually ask the magic phrase of going back. After the phrase, when the paw goes forward, she gets to go back. Do not give a veggie during this portion of the going back as it'll confuse them. The actual reward IS going back ;)

All of this can happen quickly or take time. Helps if the gp "licks you" a lot as they are comfortable enough to do so, and are deviating in the sense they are actually engaging with you, which can mean looking AT you vs. frozen and staring straight ahead. I've been able to get 3 of my sows to lick me on the cheek while being held near my face and close to their cage whenever asked "Do you want to go back" by exploiting their licking desire for example.

So, get it used to a veggie (the more it loves that veggie, the better) being a reward for being on your lap or even handled, reinforce the reward with a word/phrase, then view "return to the cage" as a bonus reward and try and find something the pig eventually does and use that as a conditional "return" to the cage requirement. Can try holding the pig near your cheek and keep repeating "want to go back?". If it turns it's head/nose towards you, immediately put it back as the condition was met. As time goes on, it might switch it up and lick while turning it's head towards you. That's OK, and the condition to "go back" can then be modified to "need to lick cheek" before placing back.

On some occasions, might need to repeat the phrase, but it should do the conditional request if it's been taught. IF the pig always does nothing, wait until it's used to hearing the "go back" phrase, then try repeating it but do NOT put it back in. Just say the phrase clearly and slow enough each word is separately spaced. If the pig all of a sudden looks up at you, licks you, etc., put it back as you just created a condition to going back, and since it WANTS to go back, it should gladly meet the condition. You HAVE to be consistent though and do it all the time. Also, NEVER reward a nibble on a finger, EVER. Boars nibble a lot, sows seem to lick more though not 100% always either way. Nibbling can turn to harder biting or constant nibbling, which you do NOT want under any circumstance. If it nibbles a finger, hold it backwards so it's mouth is over your palm instead. Their whiskers feel a flat surface and they seem to avoid nibbling on it.

May seem like a lot, but it takes a few seconds once learned, and it conveys a message of being rewarded for being handled, and being rewarded for going back, and if lucky, it teaches THEM they can communicate with you much like they'd do with each other. It'll also tame them more and give them a sense of what's going on, what your intentions are, etc..
 
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