DebbieT
New Born Pup
Hi everyone, I'm really hoping your collective wisdom can help me out.
I adopted a couple of bonded boars from a guinea pig rescue at the start of January. They are approx 2 years old but no definite date of birth for either, nor do I know if they are related.
They were fine for the first week but after that we started to notice more dominant behaviour from the smallest of the two. For a couple of days we had lots of humping, chasing and teeth chattering but never a full fight. The submissive boy didn't lunge back and only squealed and ran away. Watching them together since I've not been 100% convinced they have a happy pairing.
I've been reading all the threads on here that deal with guinea pig behaviours and bonding etc. I've rearranged their cage, there is 2 of everything, they get floor time in a bigger run each day. They seemed to settle down again but last night they had a sudden flair up which ended up with the dominant piggy getting a bleeding cut on his ear. I separated them for 24 hours but kept them near each other.
I've now been trying to rebond them in a neutral pen but I'm not sure if what I'm seeing is positive or negative. There is lots of teeth chattering and hair standing on end (both) and rumble strutting (dominant piggy) and occasional humping. They are both eating the hay but it doesn't seem to have progressed past this. They haven't yet had a sleep and it's been 3 hours now. They will occasionally sniff at each other but then start chattering teeth at each other again and having chin ups. The submissive one puts up with the humping and chasing for a bit then lunges back to put a stop to it alongside lots of squealing.
I don't feel comfortable putting them in their cage together but I also don't want to destabilise their bond further by re-separating.
I don't have the option to have two separate cages next to each other and I hate the thought of having to return them to a rescue if this really is a failed bond.
I adopted a couple of bonded boars from a guinea pig rescue at the start of January. They are approx 2 years old but no definite date of birth for either, nor do I know if they are related.
They were fine for the first week but after that we started to notice more dominant behaviour from the smallest of the two. For a couple of days we had lots of humping, chasing and teeth chattering but never a full fight. The submissive boy didn't lunge back and only squealed and ran away. Watching them together since I've not been 100% convinced they have a happy pairing.
I've been reading all the threads on here that deal with guinea pig behaviours and bonding etc. I've rearranged their cage, there is 2 of everything, they get floor time in a bigger run each day. They seemed to settle down again but last night they had a sudden flair up which ended up with the dominant piggy getting a bleeding cut on his ear. I separated them for 24 hours but kept them near each other.
I've now been trying to rebond them in a neutral pen but I'm not sure if what I'm seeing is positive or negative. There is lots of teeth chattering and hair standing on end (both) and rumble strutting (dominant piggy) and occasional humping. They are both eating the hay but it doesn't seem to have progressed past this. They haven't yet had a sleep and it's been 3 hours now. They will occasionally sniff at each other but then start chattering teeth at each other again and having chin ups. The submissive one puts up with the humping and chasing for a bit then lunges back to put a stop to it alongside lots of squealing.
I don't feel comfortable putting them in their cage together but I also don't want to destabilise their bond further by re-separating.
I don't have the option to have two separate cages next to each other and I hate the thought of having to return them to a rescue if this really is a failed bond.
