nuvola09
Member
New to the board, so... hi.
Looking for some input on a situation with a newly acquired chin. My background: chinchilla owner for 6 years of a 10-year-old female named Sashimi. I used to have a male, also, but he was inbred and passed away several years ago.
My female gets restless sometimes and, although she's always been a bit of a loner, I considered getting her a friend. I kept her and my male separated for the entire time I owned them both because I didn't want them to mate. They became so platonic that he stopped trying to mate with her, and they began cohabitating right up until his death. Therefore, I know she's capable of acclimating to another chin.
Several weeks ago I got a 5-year-old female moasic from a woman who turned out to be an "unofficial" breeder. She hides the fact that she breeds right up until you're standing in her house. Then she tells me that the female for sale has been pregnant 7 times in her short 5 year life. The cage conditions are (IMHO) deplorable. She has rancher cages which measure 12"x24" and she mostly keeps two chins in each cage. The are all wire bottom, and the females wear metal collars to prevent movement between the cage "windows." There is lots of built-up hair around the cages. This is all housed in a residential trailer. She has upwards of 15 or 20 chins in her kitchen.
Anyway, I get home with this new female named Mazie, and she's not acclimating well. I realized that this isn't just initial anxiety about being in a new space. She will not be touched or handled (except tiny bits on the face when she's a little relaxed), sprays you if you get too close, and has what I would describe as episodes of pure panic. She does laps around her cage, jumping off the sides, and latches onto the cage roof with her teeth and shakes violently. She then plops down on her side; I briefly thought she had died. I provided her with a chinchiller and a pet store cardboard tube for her to hide in. She loves the chinchiller so much that she keeps her back legs on it and reeeeaches as far as possible for stuff that she wants. I can only assume this is from being in wire bottom cages her whole life.
So, I email the breeder because I'm beginning to get concerned that I can't get my hands on the chin. I ask if she's always like this. The breeder tells me that she doesn't handle her females because if they're pregnant, she doesn't want to compromise the pregnancy. Therefore, none of them are used to being held. She also says that when they're babies, she sometimes "forgets" to handle them. She admits that many of her chins are, technically, not tame. She defends her use of rancher cages, says that wire bottoms are fine, and says ALL her chins sleep on their sides (and I informed her Mazie does NOT sleep on her side since the introduction of the chinchiller stone).
She then describes the original breeder she got my chin and bunches of others from, who kept them in 4 foot long cages. When brought into her smaller environment, none of them reacted well. Several of the females spray. She even has to use a foot barrel lid to keep off one of the aggressive males so he "doesn't get too close" to her when she feeds them. WTF!? She then has a revelation mid-email that she should sell all the chins from that breeder to people who will "let them run around and get exercise" because they are so "wild."
I'm explaining all this because I don't have enough chinchilla experience to know whether or not this female that I got is rehab-able. I'm in a bad catch 22. If I can't handle her, I can't get her into my chin-safe area for her to run around, and I also can't properly introduce her to my female. If they can't acclimate, then I can't get her into a larger, safer cage where she might be happier. The whole point of me getting the second female was as a companion to my first, but I've run into a situation where I may have to house them separately for the foreseeable future.
I'm sorry to be so long winded on my first post, but her panic attacks and the rattling are wearing at my nerves, and I'm getting worried that none of it will ever progress. Advice and tactics welcome. Also, I'm concerned for the well being of the chins owned by this woman, and wonder if there's anything I can/should do in regards to that.
HEAPS of thank you in advance.
Looking for some input on a situation with a newly acquired chin. My background: chinchilla owner for 6 years of a 10-year-old female named Sashimi. I used to have a male, also, but he was inbred and passed away several years ago.
My female gets restless sometimes and, although she's always been a bit of a loner, I considered getting her a friend. I kept her and my male separated for the entire time I owned them both because I didn't want them to mate. They became so platonic that he stopped trying to mate with her, and they began cohabitating right up until his death. Therefore, I know she's capable of acclimating to another chin.
Several weeks ago I got a 5-year-old female moasic from a woman who turned out to be an "unofficial" breeder. She hides the fact that she breeds right up until you're standing in her house. Then she tells me that the female for sale has been pregnant 7 times in her short 5 year life. The cage conditions are (IMHO) deplorable. She has rancher cages which measure 12"x24" and she mostly keeps two chins in each cage. The are all wire bottom, and the females wear metal collars to prevent movement between the cage "windows." There is lots of built-up hair around the cages. This is all housed in a residential trailer. She has upwards of 15 or 20 chins in her kitchen.
Anyway, I get home with this new female named Mazie, and she's not acclimating well. I realized that this isn't just initial anxiety about being in a new space. She will not be touched or handled (except tiny bits on the face when she's a little relaxed), sprays you if you get too close, and has what I would describe as episodes of pure panic. She does laps around her cage, jumping off the sides, and latches onto the cage roof with her teeth and shakes violently. She then plops down on her side; I briefly thought she had died. I provided her with a chinchiller and a pet store cardboard tube for her to hide in. She loves the chinchiller so much that she keeps her back legs on it and reeeeaches as far as possible for stuff that she wants. I can only assume this is from being in wire bottom cages her whole life.
So, I email the breeder because I'm beginning to get concerned that I can't get my hands on the chin. I ask if she's always like this. The breeder tells me that she doesn't handle her females because if they're pregnant, she doesn't want to compromise the pregnancy. Therefore, none of them are used to being held. She also says that when they're babies, she sometimes "forgets" to handle them. She admits that many of her chins are, technically, not tame. She defends her use of rancher cages, says that wire bottoms are fine, and says ALL her chins sleep on their sides (and I informed her Mazie does NOT sleep on her side since the introduction of the chinchiller stone).
She then describes the original breeder she got my chin and bunches of others from, who kept them in 4 foot long cages. When brought into her smaller environment, none of them reacted well. Several of the females spray. She even has to use a foot barrel lid to keep off one of the aggressive males so he "doesn't get too close" to her when she feeds them. WTF!? She then has a revelation mid-email that she should sell all the chins from that breeder to people who will "let them run around and get exercise" because they are so "wild."
I'm explaining all this because I don't have enough chinchilla experience to know whether or not this female that I got is rehab-able. I'm in a bad catch 22. If I can't handle her, I can't get her into my chin-safe area for her to run around, and I also can't properly introduce her to my female. If they can't acclimate, then I can't get her into a larger, safer cage where she might be happier. The whole point of me getting the second female was as a companion to my first, but I've run into a situation where I may have to house them separately for the foreseeable future.
I'm sorry to be so long winded on my first post, but her panic attacks and the rattling are wearing at my nerves, and I'm getting worried that none of it will ever progress. Advice and tactics welcome. Also, I'm concerned for the well being of the chins owned by this woman, and wonder if there's anything I can/should do in regards to that.
HEAPS of thank you in advance.