Anonymous wrote:OP here. This has been immensely helpful - thank you all. I'm still leaning towards adopting a pair. Question: would it work to have them in my daughter's bedroom? The only other option would be down in our basement, with less social interaction. (We only go downstairs for laundry and such.)
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This has been immensely helpful - thank you all. I'm still leaning towards adopting a pair. Question: would it work to have them in my daughter's bedroom? The only other option would be down in our basement, with less social interaction. (We only go downstairs for laundry and such.)
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This has been immensely helpful - thank you all. I'm still leaning towards adopting a pair. Question: would it work to have them in my daughter's bedroom? The only other option would be down in our basement, with less social interaction. (We only go downstairs for laundry and such.)
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This has been immensely helpful - thank you all. I'm still leaning towards adopting a pair. Question: would it work to have them in my daughter's bedroom? The only other option would be down in our basement, with less social interaction. (We only go downstairs for laundry and such.)
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This has been immensely helpful - thank you all. I'm still leaning towards adopting a pair. Question: would it work to have them in my daughter's bedroom? The only other option would be down in our basement, with less social interaction. (We only go downstairs for laundry and such.)
Anonymous wrote:They poop. A LOT. Get a Chinchilla instead. They are much cleaner and easier to take care of, and MUCH less stinky!
Anonymous wrote:We have one and he is very friendly--mostly because he is handled a lot. My DD calls him her therapig. He loves watching TV and will sit very still for hours watching. Football especially rivets him. She does all the feeding and cleaning--once a week for the cage.
When we acquired him we also had a very gentle rabbit and they lived together. When she died we got another rabbit, but male and he was too territorial so they have to be in separate cages.
We do put them in a pen to play together, which sometimes goes well depending on the rabbit's mood. We were concerned because of the well known social needs of guinea pigs but because he is so human friendly and gets lots of interaction he doesn't seem the worse for not having a cage mate.
Anonymous wrote:They poop. A LOT. Get a Chinchilla instead. They are much cleaner and easier to take care of, and MUCH less stinky!