Dilly's Piggies
Teenage Guinea Pig
I have a couple of pigs that get a mild gas/rumbly tummy issue after they eat veggies, it's nothing serious but I hear some people swear by infant gas drops for this, what brand do you guys use and what dosage?
Thank you! Do you find this effective and also is it safe to use daily to prevent gas in those prone to it or is it an as needed thing?I use Woodwards gripe water, the dose usually mentioned on here is 0.3ml 3 times a day but I have dosed higher when needed which my vet was happy with when I told them.
I do find it effective. Plus if need be I put them on the massage pad I have too. I use it more as treatment when the gas hits rather than a preventative. It would be better to try to identify which veg are causing the gas so hopefully you would not need to give the Gripe water that often.Thank you! Do you find this effective and also is it safe to use daily to prevent gas in those prone to it or is it an as needed thing?
Sorry to hijack but is there any notable risks to gripe water?
Oooh, tomato is interesting as both of the two pigs that suffer the gas do love their tomatoes... I will try removing those next! I have also tried fibreplex with one of the two pigs and it did work very well for her, 3 1ml doses a day and her symptoms were gone completely, I always keep this in incase Delilah has a problem, the other girl Paisley is relatively new though for this problem but another thing is both of these pigs are my most anxious ones, I wonder if anxiety, tomatoes and eating too fast are what's causing this. Would love to hear your results tomorrow, please post them!I have a boar that's very similar @CavyConnoisseur and tomato causes this stomach to go insane. I've definitely try an elimination diet to work out the worst offenders and remove those from the diet.
My vet said probiotics can be used daily as a bit of assistance. It might not help, or cure the issue but it won't harm.
He's going to the vet tomorrow as his stomach has been excessively noisy lately so I'll feed back on what was discussed in case anything might help your piggy.
Oxbow pellets contain wheat and cane molasse. Tomato and carrot is a food with sugar. Are you sure that the mix pellets+these vegs are not the cause of the trouble? Why do wild animals have no bloat even eating the "dangerous" spring grass? 1/4 cup pellet is considered excessive nowadays; the new researches recommend not more than one TEA spoon...I have a couple of pigs with interstitial cystitis so therefore I feed a low calcium diet to everybody, have done for a year now, they get 1/4 cup oxbow adult pellets, oxbow timothy hay and for veggies they get red or green leaf lettuce, cucumber, celery, cherry tomatoes, green beans, bell peppers and a small amount of carrot daily, roughly 1 cup per pig, they don't get anything dark leafy green as it causes calcium deposits and triggers flare ups for my IC girls, I'm very strict with their diet. The only thing I think could be the problem is they are savages at veggie time, they compete with each other to see who can eat the most the quickest. I don't think what I'm feeding is causing this but I am going to try splitting their veggies to half in the morning and half at night so they don't get such a large portion in one go. I have a herd of 5 and a herd of 4 so they are quite competitive for the veggies, they act like they haven't been fed in a year!![]()
I've heard that people use a baby treatment before.I have a couple of pigs that get a mild gas/rumbly tummy issue after they eat veggies, it's nothing serious but I hear some people swear by infant gas drops for this, what brand do you guys use and what dosage?
I was supposed to say 1/8 of a cup not 1/4, I was thinking of the amount for a pair of pigs, sorry for that. I know KMS Hayloft pellets are the best and contain the least calcium but as I'm in the UK the best brand I can get here is Oxbow so we have to make do with that. I could remove pellets completely but I wouldn't want to compromise their vitamins and minerals they get from them since my piggies don't go outside much with our UK weather, I'll have to look more into feeding less than 1/8 cup pellets.Oxbow pellets contain wheat and cane molasse. Tomato and carrot is a food with sugar. Are you sure that the mix pellets+these vegs are not the cause of the trouble? Why do wild animals have no bloat even eating the "dangerous" spring grass? 1/4 cup pellet is considered excessive nowadays; the new researches recommend not more than one TEA spoon...
Anyway the chemistry work just the same into us and into them: and when you need an abdomen ultrasound you are never allowed (at least here we have these rules) to eat wheat and sugar. But you can eat (alone) all the vegs you like... If I were you I would get rid of pellets and about calcium I would follow Guinea Lynx food list and calculator.
I adopted a piggie (months ago) who came home with some bladder issue and an alert for her being prone to calcium deposit. Her urine now is better than mine... no deposit, she does not drink at all (because maybe the vegs and fresh grass keep her body well hydrated), 3-4 pieces of pellets a day as a treat only, a lot of clear wee and a satisfied vet...
(a thing I don't like of industrial food: their labels never report the percentage of carbohydrates and harmful sugars...so strange... but you can get an idea when you sum 14% proteins+26% cellulose+ 8,5% cendres+ something else=? no good! definitely far from a natural diet for piggies... and I am reading on the label by Oxbow that they suggest 20g only a day, not more).
Sorry for this "sermon" but if most piggies (and humans!) have all the same issues, maybe some habit considered right is actually wrong... it can be a tomato, it can be a pellet, or maybe tomato+pellet!
I deleted pellets and my piggies have no gas, no deposit, nothing wrong, differently from another poor piggie I owned many years ago, who surely died thanks to the wrong diet approved by his savvy (and expensive) vets.
You can buy grain-free pellets in the UK which are good for piggies with digestive issues. Versele Laga is very good which can be bought on zooplus. They are much healthier than KMS hayloft and oxbow.I was supposed to say 1/8 of a cup not 1/4, I was thinking of the amount for a pair of pigs, sorry for that. I know KMS Hayloft pellets are the best and contain the least calcium but as I'm in the UK the best brand I can get here is Oxbow so we have to make do with that. I could remove pellets completely but I wouldn't want to compromise their vitamins and minerals they get from them since my piggies don't go outside much with our UK weather, I'll have to look more into feeding less than 1/8 cup pellets.