Guinea Pig Basic Care Guide
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Guinea Pig Basic Care
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Baby rats seek loving, fun homes - Newcastle (15th May 2008)
Baby rats seek loving, fun homes - Newcastle  More...

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I have fostered both baby and adult rats from a lady who had 2 accidental litters. She is emigrating so I agreed to find homes for them.  More...

Lots of rats needing homes - Margate, Thanet, Kent (28th March 2008)
Lots of rats (a mix of different coloured hooded rats) seek loving homes in the Margate area. They are all very friendly and all just under a year old.  More...

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450,000 obese rabbits on the run (5th April 2008)
An estimated 450,000 pet rabbits in the UK are obese - a shocking figure that represents 30% of the total rabbit population in the UK.   More...

Missing cat called Spooky from Kent (28th March 2008)
Spooky was last seen on the 24th March (Easter Monday) in the GREAT THRIFT
area of Petts Wood.
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Are your pets members of your family? (25th March 2008)
Do you think of your pets as family members? Is your cat or dog a replacement for the children that have now flown the nest? New research from the University of Warwick suggests what we've always suspected, that pets are sometimes more like family than our own kin.  More...

 

 

Rat Rescue :: Guinea Pig Healthcare

Guinea Pig Healthcare

Bathing

Many novice owners of guinea pigs are very nervous of bathing their animals because they have been fearful of the effects this may have on the nervous system!. The myth that these animals cannot stand any kind of stress is totally erroneous. They're animals, for goodness sake and their behaviour usually make a damn sight more sense than that of our own species.

Guinea pigs react with such vigour and speed when they feel at all threatened, for the simple reason that this is their only form of defence from what could be predatory attack. They are not built to fight off such attacks so nature has given them a very good nervous system which enables them to get the hell out of it as fast as they can. She also equipped them with a good sound system to warn others in the pack of impending attack and hopefully frighten off those doing the attacking.

Peter Gurney Books

What I am trying to say is that much of the nervous behaviour is more sound and fury than the sound of an imminent cardiac attack!.

Like small boys, some guinea pigs object to the very idea of water and soapy suds upon them and let their feeling known to owners as soon as they are put in the sink and the water begins to flow about them. Beware of those that try to commit suicide by leaping out as soon as they are put in, for they can be pretty nifty!. If you are not nimble of eye, hand and body, it would be better if these types were bathed in a bath. It maybe more uncomfortable for you on your knees but it is far safer for them!.

It is a good idea to bath your guinea pigs at least once every three months in an anti parasitic shampoo. The one I use is Prioderm which is used upon children who get hair lice. I leave it on for about ten minutes than rinse off.

If your animals live indoors it is sufficient just to give a vigorous drying by towel and them put them back into their quarters. With animals that live outdoors it it is vital that they are thoroughly dry before they are put outside again.

Even shampooing in a good human medicated scalp cleansing shampoo such as Alphosyl, though not having anti parasitic chemicals in it, can still have anti parasitic effects. A clean skin and coat is not at all as appetising to the kind of parasites that guinea pig flesh is heir to as a dirty one.

Though the veterinary profession insists human hair shampoo is dangerous for animals, it is not, and certainly none that are recommended in this book. It is also, incidentally, a lot cheaper than any you will buy from a veterinary surgery. Remember that most of it has already been tested animal guinea pigs anyway!.

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