Jerome Sobacki
New Born Pup
Hello,
Mudflap here. My granddaughter has two guinea pigs which Papa has been assign the job of caretaker, along with three cats and four parrots. Elisa and Anna are her two pigs. A couple of weeks ago Elisa was spending a lot of time in her hut. I took her out and her right eye was swollen and had a puncture in it with some crusty stuff on the surface. It looked really bad.
My granddaughter's mom is a vet so I took Elisa in. She said her eye was gone and gave some meds to apply. After about two days it was swollen and she was not eating or drinking. I called the vet and she said to bring her in and she would remove the eye. She also said it was risky putting her to sleep. She removed the eye and I brought her back home. She was really out of it until the next morning. She kept falling over when she walked. She was not eating or drinking. She was getting thinner and spend all of her time in the corner. I blended some pellets as fine as I could and added water to the mix and started feeding her with a spoon. I also took a small syringe, the one with out the needle, and started giving her water. She ate a small amount of the pellet mix but did she ever take to the water. I was going through this process three to four times a day. More often with the water. After three days she was not doing to good. It broke my heart to see the little gal in such a struggle for life. I was feeding her on the table but she kept falling over on her right side (right eye gone) . I picked her up and held her to my chest and started to feed her and water her in this manner.
She was not doing good. I mix up a little salad for the gals about every day; carrots, cucumber skins. sweet peppers, Roma lettuce, celery, diced tomatoes, & apple. I forgot to remove the bowls from the cage that night and when I got up the next morning Elisa was eating her salad. I knew we had turned it around. That was six days ago. Yesterday I took her out to feed and water her in the morning and while I was mixing her pellets she run over the bowl and got her head in it and started pigging out before I had a chance to mix it all . It brought a tear to my eye. I am 6' 1", 240 pounds and have worked as a steamfitter for 30 years, but this little gal just overwhelmed me. She is not a 100% yet but she is getting stronger every day. She is going to go through times with half of her vision gone. it is not like a human or dog losing a eye. From her nose her whole right side is blind. Put your open hand on your nose and close your right eye and you have pretty much got Elisa's field of vision.
I just wanted to share this so if anyone else is going through caring for a guinea after eye removal this is what I went through and it is not hopeless.
Mudflap here. My granddaughter has two guinea pigs which Papa has been assign the job of caretaker, along with three cats and four parrots. Elisa and Anna are her two pigs. A couple of weeks ago Elisa was spending a lot of time in her hut. I took her out and her right eye was swollen and had a puncture in it with some crusty stuff on the surface. It looked really bad.
My granddaughter's mom is a vet so I took Elisa in. She said her eye was gone and gave some meds to apply. After about two days it was swollen and she was not eating or drinking. I called the vet and she said to bring her in and she would remove the eye. She also said it was risky putting her to sleep. She removed the eye and I brought her back home. She was really out of it until the next morning. She kept falling over when she walked. She was not eating or drinking. She was getting thinner and spend all of her time in the corner. I blended some pellets as fine as I could and added water to the mix and started feeding her with a spoon. I also took a small syringe, the one with out the needle, and started giving her water. She ate a small amount of the pellet mix but did she ever take to the water. I was going through this process three to four times a day. More often with the water. After three days she was not doing to good. It broke my heart to see the little gal in such a struggle for life. I was feeding her on the table but she kept falling over on her right side (right eye gone) . I picked her up and held her to my chest and started to feed her and water her in this manner.
She was not doing good. I mix up a little salad for the gals about every day; carrots, cucumber skins. sweet peppers, Roma lettuce, celery, diced tomatoes, & apple. I forgot to remove the bowls from the cage that night and when I got up the next morning Elisa was eating her salad. I knew we had turned it around. That was six days ago. Yesterday I took her out to feed and water her in the morning and while I was mixing her pellets she run over the bowl and got her head in it and started pigging out before I had a chance to mix it all . It brought a tear to my eye. I am 6' 1", 240 pounds and have worked as a steamfitter for 30 years, but this little gal just overwhelmed me. She is not a 100% yet but she is getting stronger every day. She is going to go through times with half of her vision gone. it is not like a human or dog losing a eye. From her nose her whole right side is blind. Put your open hand on your nose and close your right eye and you have pretty much got Elisa's field of vision.
I just wanted to share this so if anyone else is going through caring for a guinea after eye removal this is what I went through and it is not hopeless.