Guinea Pigs are Herd Animalsby Aimee Amodio | More from this Blogger 12 Apr 2008 01:49 PM Studies of guinea pigs in the wild have shown that they tend to live in herds of five to ten. A herd generally has one adult male and the rest female or sexually immature children. You may not want an entire herd of guinea pigs in your home, but your pigs will be happiest if they aren't alone. Both anecdotal and experimental evidence points to domestic guinea pigs being happiest and healthiest when living with other guinea pigs. So how do you pick the right partner for your pig?
Don't cram your two guinea pigs into a cage meant for one. Cavy Spirit (a guinea pig rescue and education group) suggests a two by four cage or larger -- approximately ten and a half square feet or more -- for two males housed together. Keeping two guinea pigs won't double your pet care spending -- or your cage cleaning time. Experts find that the average cost increase is just twenty-five percent for two guinea pigs over one guinea pig. A few ways guinea pigs benefit from interaction with other guinea pigs:
If your guinea pigs do stop getting along, that doesn't mean they should be moved to different rooms. They'll still benefit from seeing each other and interacting with each other. Try a cage with a shared grid wall so they can interact safely and without fighting. Learn more about Aimee Amodio ![]() Aimee is a fiction writer... dog lover... music lover... Relevantpets tags User Comments No comments on this article yet. Be the first to comment! Community Tags guinea pigs Discuss this article
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