PatsyPanda
New Born Pup
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2017
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 45
We're new to guineas and got 2 boys about 6 weeks ago - we think they were about 4 months old. Sadly one got an infection and died within about 4 weeks. We went back to the pet shop and they had what they thought was another boy of the same group. We thought we'd give it a try and for the past 2 weeks it all seemed to be going well. There had been an initial bout of mega-mounting but they seemed to have calmed down.
We have a double level hutch which is in a child's playhouse so we sometimes in the day leave the hutch doors open and they can run around more. We also have a run in the garden that they've been going into most days. They seemed to be getting on well - often cuddled up together in the hide.
Then on Friday evening we were going out so they were taken out the garden and put in the playhouse a little earlier than usual. As they would be there a while, we left the hutch doors open and left them like that overnight, rather than closing them into the hutch as usual. Saturday morning, my husband discovered the original boy with a gashed mouth which needed a small op by the vet to fix. It seemed like there'd been a fight.
Last night we kept them in the hutch but on separate levels. Today we tried them together again to see. Straight away there was lots of chattering at each other and it looked on the verge of something more unpleasant so we separated them. They've been in separate runs in the garden but next to each other. There was a bit of chattering at the start but it's calmed down. There's a bit of dominance strutting too. And a bit of sniffing through the bars - not sure if there'd be teeth there were it not for the bars. But they both seem to be doing a lot of jumping about, which is a little unusual for them.
Is it worth pursuing it with them in separate runs / hutches for a few days to see if they can still get on or does the fact that they're at the injuring stage, mean it's gone too far? Could it just be a hormone spike that'll pass....till the next one?
We're due to go on holiday in a few weeks so we don't have a lot of time to work it through. Our friend is due to look after them but we don't want to leave them pigs at war.
Any thought?
We have a double level hutch which is in a child's playhouse so we sometimes in the day leave the hutch doors open and they can run around more. We also have a run in the garden that they've been going into most days. They seemed to be getting on well - often cuddled up together in the hide.
Then on Friday evening we were going out so they were taken out the garden and put in the playhouse a little earlier than usual. As they would be there a while, we left the hutch doors open and left them like that overnight, rather than closing them into the hutch as usual. Saturday morning, my husband discovered the original boy with a gashed mouth which needed a small op by the vet to fix. It seemed like there'd been a fight.
Last night we kept them in the hutch but on separate levels. Today we tried them together again to see. Straight away there was lots of chattering at each other and it looked on the verge of something more unpleasant so we separated them. They've been in separate runs in the garden but next to each other. There was a bit of chattering at the start but it's calmed down. There's a bit of dominance strutting too. And a bit of sniffing through the bars - not sure if there'd be teeth there were it not for the bars. But they both seem to be doing a lot of jumping about, which is a little unusual for them.
Is it worth pursuing it with them in separate runs / hutches for a few days to see if they can still get on or does the fact that they're at the injuring stage, mean it's gone too far? Could it just be a hormone spike that'll pass....till the next one?
We're due to go on holiday in a few weeks so we don't have a lot of time to work it through. Our friend is due to look after them but we don't want to leave them pigs at war.
Any thought?