GuineaPiggles18
New Born Pup
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2018
- Messages
- 20
- Reaction score
- 12
- Points
- 155
Hi
I don’t know if this has an obvious answer or if this is something other people have noticed. I have 3 female guinea pigs who have all lived outside all their lives. The two younger ones, Orwin and Mavis, are about between 1 year and 1 1/2 years (not entirely sure). They’re ‘rescues’ or though I say as I didn’t realise how bad the breeder was but I just couldn’t leave them. Then there is Jemima who is, I think, 7 years old. She extremely healthy for her age apart from a lipoma which I took her to the vets for but they advised just to opt out of an OP because of her age. Lastly I did have another but unfortunately she died and earlier this also at age 7 but she had been loosing weight throughout the year, so it was expected.
Lots of other people who have guinea pigs indoors, I’ve noticed rarely get past the age of 5. They appear to have the ‘perfect diet’(mine only have pellets, hay that we use for the horses, readigrass for supplement and the occasional bit of veg) and the most amazing home (mine are in a 5ft two storey hutch with a modified ramp) and are taken to the vet regularly (only ever taken twice for mites and for Jems lipoma) in the 10 years I’ve owned guinea pigs.
I’m not saying that all indoor guinea pigs have shorter lives but the majority I’ve seen do. Any idea why on earth mine seem to be happy, healthy even though how they are kept would be deemed ‘unacceptable’ by some guinea pig owners (not making that up a few have been appalled by it). Or am I just very lucky with it
? Also has anyone else noticed this or just me?
I don’t know if this has an obvious answer or if this is something other people have noticed. I have 3 female guinea pigs who have all lived outside all their lives. The two younger ones, Orwin and Mavis, are about between 1 year and 1 1/2 years (not entirely sure). They’re ‘rescues’ or though I say as I didn’t realise how bad the breeder was but I just couldn’t leave them. Then there is Jemima who is, I think, 7 years old. She extremely healthy for her age apart from a lipoma which I took her to the vets for but they advised just to opt out of an OP because of her age. Lastly I did have another but unfortunately she died and earlier this also at age 7 but she had been loosing weight throughout the year, so it was expected.
Lots of other people who have guinea pigs indoors, I’ve noticed rarely get past the age of 5. They appear to have the ‘perfect diet’(mine only have pellets, hay that we use for the horses, readigrass for supplement and the occasional bit of veg) and the most amazing home (mine are in a 5ft two storey hutch with a modified ramp) and are taken to the vet regularly (only ever taken twice for mites and for Jems lipoma) in the 10 years I’ve owned guinea pigs.
I’m not saying that all indoor guinea pigs have shorter lives but the majority I’ve seen do. Any idea why on earth mine seem to be happy, healthy even though how they are kept would be deemed ‘unacceptable’ by some guinea pig owners (not making that up a few have been appalled by it). Or am I just very lucky with it
