Why would I want a guinea pig?
Aside from the fact that guinea pigs are incredibly cute, there are a
variety of reasons why they make good pets. In particular, the common
guinea pig is a low-cost, low-maintenance animal; you will need to change
their bedding once or twice a week, supply fresh water every day or two and
provide them with food and hay on a daily basis. A good cage will cost you
around $30 to $40 if bought from a pet store, and $15-30 worth of bedding can
last up to a month or more, depending on what you choose. Pellets are also
inexpensive, running anywhere from $6 to $9 a bag, and hay is extremely
cheap if purchased from a feed and garden store in bulk. Fresh vegetables
can be obtained from the grocery store or grown in your own back yard.
For children, the guinea pig is an ideal pet. They are extremely
docile, rarely bite and are very sociable. They love to be petted, and
will gurgle and grunt happily and nonstop when given this kind of
attention. They are larger than most other popular small mammals, such
as mice, gerbils and hamsters making them easy to handle (and catch,
should they happen to get away). Although they aren't as intelligent
as rats, the guinea pig is trainable and far more lively than the
stereotypes may suggest.
One guinea pig, or more?
For most people, including young children, owning one guinea pig is
probably enough. The cavy will quickly adjust to being around humans, and
will make an excellent playmate. Most commercially available guinea pig
cages are designed to hold one cavy comfortably; people wishing to keep
more than one guinea pig together are often times forced to custom-build a
cage. And, of course, it is less expensive to care for one cavy than it is
for two.
There are, however, several advantages to owning more than one guinea pig.
Unlike some rodents, guinea pigs get along very well if housed together
(with some exceptions, listed below), and if you aren't going to be
spending a lot of time at home with your pet, it is advisable that you do
get it a companion. Otherwise, your cavy will become very lonely and its
health will suffer.
If you do opt for caging two or more guinea pigs together, you should
be careful about their sex. Two females will get along very well
together in a cage, though they may "bicker" over food and other treats.
Two males may end up fighting, unless you give them considerable
room- enough so that they can stake out their own territory. If you ever
introduce a female into a cage with two males, however, you are asking
for trouble; they will fight mercilessly over the right to mate with her,
and the weaker of the two will eventually be starved to death by the
dominant male, being driven from both food and water. If you neuter one
of the males, it may prevent this kind of fighting, as the neutered male
will no longer be a rival to the other, but there are no guarantees.
Without a doubt, a male and a female make the best company.
The female will defer to the male, who is dominant, and the male will
general act peacefully towards the female. If you do opt to keep an
opposite-sex pair of cavies together, you will end up having to have one of
them fixed, or your female will constantly be manufacturing little baby
guinea pigs. With an estrus cycle of 18 days, and a gestation cycle of
only two months, it is quite possible for one pair of guinea pigs to produce
dozens of offspring in a year.
Choosing a sex
Although each guinea pig is different, as a general rule, males
are more active than females, and are slightly larger when fully grown.
Males also give off a rather strong scent when they are sexually aroused;
if the male is neutered, however, this odor becomes less prevalent.
Females tend to be smaller and more docile, but they do present
some unique problems. First of all, it is more expensive to spay
a female than it is to neuter a male (this is true for animals of
any type). Second, your female may already be pregnant if you bring
her home from a pet shop or a friend's home, especially if no care was
taken to separate her from her siblings shortly after weaning. And last,
if a female does not have a litter before she is about 9 months old, you
will need to spay her if there is ever any chance, no matter how remote,
that she will become pregnant later. The hip bones of childless sows
can start to fuse between 9 and 12 months of age, and future pregnancies
can become life-threatening.
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