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#11 |
Pure joy
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#12 |
Archer and Armstrong vs. the World
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Just put some extra hay or newspaper or whatever in the cage (whatever it is you're using), that is the kind of stuff they like to burrow into to keep warm.
I doubt temperature in the 60s would hurt them. Osterbaum is probably more referring to people's tendencies to leave rabbits outside in rabbit hutches/pens which when it becomes very cold is often not good enough to keep them from freezing to death because they are so small. Rodents in nature burrow underground to survive freezing temperatures, which isn't possible in many enclosements that people create for them. You have to provide insulation and so on instead.
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The Valiant Review |
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#13 |
So we are clear
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well abit late for that though, already picked her up multiple times. Now it seems like things took a step back cause she is hiding in her little house all the time now
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"don't hate me for being a heterosexual white guy disparaging slacktivism, hate me for all those murders I've done." |
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#14 |
Archer and Armstrong vs. the World
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If she's anything like a dog she'll come out when she's hungry.
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The Valiant Review |
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#15 |
For the right price...
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Timothy Hay is the stuff for most rodents if I remember right. Give it a long time before picking up if you can help it. If you need to get her out of the cage, what I did for my rats was set up a ramp to the cage exit onto a table that was too tall for them to climb off of, and set up some diversions for them to run around on while I cleaned the cage/whatever.
Eventually you can con rodents into climbing around on you, it just takes time and familiarity. |
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#16 |
Not a Taco
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 3,313
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Let her stay in her house, since it's probably where she feels safest right now.
Guinea Pigs love timothy hay, and the two we have get crazy excited when we give them some. Food is also a thing they come running out for.
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I did a lot of posting on here as a teenager, and I was pretty awful. Even after I learned, grew up, and came to be on the right side of a lot of important issues, I was still angry, abrasive, and generally increased the amount of hate in the world, in pretty unacceptable ways. On the off chance that someone is taking a trip down memory lane looking through those old threads, I wanted to devote my signature to say directly to you, I'm sorry. Thank you for letting me be better, NPF. |
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#17 |
So we are clear
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what exactly is timothy hay? More importantly where could I get some?
Now she doesn't seem to be eating the pelets in her food dish, and starting to worry me abit. Will she eventually eat them when she gets hungry enough or is she being starved?
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#18 |
Not a Taco
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 3,313
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Timothy Hay is hay from Timothy grass, which you can pick up at most pet supply places, I believe. It's really important that you give your guinea pig hay to eat/sit in.
As for not eating, that could be a problem, it might be that she's picky and doesn't like it, in which case if you mix in something she does like, in smaller and smaller amounts, she'll start to get used to the other pellets, and get used to them.
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I did a lot of posting on here as a teenager, and I was pretty awful. Even after I learned, grew up, and came to be on the right side of a lot of important issues, I was still angry, abrasive, and generally increased the amount of hate in the world, in pretty unacceptable ways. On the off chance that someone is taking a trip down memory lane looking through those old threads, I wanted to devote my signature to say directly to you, I'm sorry. Thank you for letting me be better, NPF. |
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#19 | |
So we are clear
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thats the thing, the food she got does have other things mixed in with the pellets, she just eats only those things and pushes the pellets out of the way.
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"don't hate me for being a heterosexual white guy disparaging slacktivism, hate me for all those murders I've done." |
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#20 |
Not a Taco
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 3,313
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Make sure that it's timothy hay, and not alfalfa, since alfalfa hay is bad for them to have too much of. They can't have an unlimited supply of alfalfa, since it can cause kidney stones and they'll get fat, but timothy hay should always be in the cage, in constant supply.
If she's not eating the pellets, just give her a lot of vegetables with vitamin C and hay, since the pellets aren't necessary for guinea pigs, they're just helpful. They need a vitamin C source every day, since they can't make their own vitamin C. Good sources of vitamin C are belle and red peppers, tomatoes, dandelion greens, and parsley. Make sure that there are no seeds in the peppers, just the flesh of it, since they can't eat the seeds. Strawberries are also good. Edit: Also, don't give iceburg lettuce ever, if you didn't know that, but romaine lettuce is fine.
__________________
I did a lot of posting on here as a teenager, and I was pretty awful. Even after I learned, grew up, and came to be on the right side of a lot of important issues, I was still angry, abrasive, and generally increased the amount of hate in the world, in pretty unacceptable ways. On the off chance that someone is taking a trip down memory lane looking through those old threads, I wanted to devote my signature to say directly to you, I'm sorry. Thank you for letting me be better, NPF. |
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