Odd pig behavior?

Cocoa&Caramel

New Born Pup
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Hi all! I am relatively new guinea pig owner so some behaviors are so odd to me and I just want to make sure that I shouldn't be concerned.

A little backstory on my pigs: I have a female Cocoa who is 1.5 years old and a neutered male Caramel who is 1 year and 3 months old. Initially, my vet and I thought that both of my pigs were female, I guess Caramel was too young at his first checkup to really be able to tell easily. Either way, we ended up with 4 additional baby boys Nov 2020 (who have all since found great homes). I separated them, and due to a family tragedy and concerns with COVID, it was about 10 months until I was able to get Caramel neutered and all healed up. I reintroduced them late August 2021 and the introduction went fine, so I moved them in. It took them about 2 days to get settled in and they seemed much happier together than they were apart. Skip to now, late October 2021, and suddenly Cocoa has started rumbling at Caramel and trying to mount him? (For reference Caramel has never stopped rumbling at Cocoa, which I thought was normal.) Today they started circling each other which concerns me. There has been no fight as much as I can tell (no blood or bite wounds) and even no teeth chattering. There has been some distressed noises when one gets too close to the other, though. When they circle eventually one will run off and sometimes even popcorn which is so confusing to me. Right now they are happily sharing food out of one bowl and are grooming near each other. I am just confused on whether this means that the bond is failing and I need to separate or if this is normal and they'll get over it. Some advice would be much appreciated!
 
Is she in season? You would expect to see an increase in dominance around this time.

The distressed noises - a high pitched squeal is not necessarily distress but could in fact be submission squealing. If so, then this is a good thing and is the submissive piggy saying they are no threat and is backing down

Sows: Behaviour and female health problems (including ovarian cysts)
When Sows Experience A Strong Season (videos)
I am not 100% sure. Is there a way I could tell? She hasn't done this before and has never seemed to have a problem with Caramel's dominance behaviors.
Is the submission squealing ok if it's the male? It seems like both of them are squealing at different times (ie. Caramel will come over when Cocoa is in a house and she'll start squealing, later Cocoa will come over when Caramel is getting a drink and he'll start squealing). Hence why I am so confused.
 
Hello. I have two boars. They both squeal if the other one comes near them if they have something nice, like a piece of carrot or a comfy hidey. It’s just their way of talking to each other. Sometimes it does sound a bit over the top. But they don’t fight. Occasionally they circle each other and then run off and pop corn. I think they enjoy the drama lol 😍.
 
My rescued boys do this and I actually posted a few weeks ago with a similar scenario. My submissive boy actually squeals very loud but never in pain.

My dominant boy rumblestruts very often and then popcorns afterwards! Keep an eye out for blood and reciprocating dominance behavior. I’ll let me profound experts chime in. I wanted to reassure you this is common.
 
My 4 year old female Daisy and neutered male Oscar (almost 4) occasionally have rumble battles, and chase each other around. This always ends in popcorning so I'm not concerned - it's actually quite funny to watch 😂
 
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