Binki
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2020
- Messages
- 69
I was asked whether I could take on a female chinchilla that the owner (who inherited her from a relative) cannot take proper care of. In fact the poor girl has not been out of her cage for six months and needs a new home ASAP. Problem is I have a boy, so the chins would have to live in separate cages their entire lives and it seems a bit unfair to me. I do not want to be the evil bishop of Aquila in the film Ladyhawke, keeping them 'always together, eternally apart' or whatever the slogan was.
I am in a quandary because I fell in love with the girl but I do not want this to interfere with which is best for her. There are two excellent rescues in town that take on chins. The first has seriously ramped up the vetting of prospective adopters, who are grilled about their knowledge of chin keeping and have to provide, via live video, evidence of the suitability of the chin's intended habitat and environment. The second is exclusively for small animals, has an equally rigorous vetting of adopters and the advantage that in the meantime the chin lives with a fosterer. In my view the advantage of those rescues is that they open the possibility for the chin to be adopted by someone who has other girls, thus giving her the chance to live with a companion or at least have a friend to popcorn with at playtime,
My boy seems happy as a singleton, as he was previously attacked and is now lavished with attention and care but I wonder: what woudl be the best for both chins? Would be most grateful for your views on the best options for the chins' welfare,
I am in a quandary because I fell in love with the girl but I do not want this to interfere with which is best for her. There are two excellent rescues in town that take on chins. The first has seriously ramped up the vetting of prospective adopters, who are grilled about their knowledge of chin keeping and have to provide, via live video, evidence of the suitability of the chin's intended habitat and environment. The second is exclusively for small animals, has an equally rigorous vetting of adopters and the advantage that in the meantime the chin lives with a fosterer. In my view the advantage of those rescues is that they open the possibility for the chin to be adopted by someone who has other girls, thus giving her the chance to live with a companion or at least have a friend to popcorn with at playtime,
My boy seems happy as a singleton, as he was previously attacked and is now lavished with attention and care but I wonder: what woudl be the best for both chins? Would be most grateful for your views on the best options for the chins' welfare,