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Jujubean

New member
Joined
Nov 29, 2012
Messages
4
Hi,
So I have owned three chinchillas for about 3 years now. I never had an issue with introducing these three to each other. Always smooth sailing with them. But I recently adopted a new chinchilla. I let her and my other three out to play, as we have always did with introducing a new chin. I provided a big pan for the four to take dust baths in together. Everything was going great and I was excited to see them all playing together with any issues.

So after about 2 hours of playing together, I saw the four all huddled together sleeping. I decided it was time for them to be put away. I placed my 3 into their cage and the new in her cage. All was fine for about an hour when I heard "barking". I went to check out what was going on. My three chinnies all turned against one another and were fighting and pulling chunks of fur out. The new one was in her cage standing on her hind legs hissing and barking as well as spraying... Like a King Cobra snake. After about 2 hours of calming down my three and having them love one another again, I went to check on the new one. She was still in cobra stance. I opened up her cage and she went straight for a bite attack. Since it was very late and I need to get some sleep for work, I just let her be. When I woke up in the morning and checked on her, she had managed to destroy her cage and throw all her food and hay out of the cage.

It's been about four days now and no progress. The tensions are lower and the new one is no longer destroying her cage or cobra striking. But she still wont get along with the others. I tried introducing her to one of my chins. This is always willing to make new friends so I thought she would be best. They were out together and occasionally hop past each other. No fighting. I kept them out for about an hour. So I decided to bring out another one of my chins. This one is shy and "afraidy cat". The new chin hopped up to her and they nose touched and they hopped on their merry ways. So they looked alright. But the new chin and the first chin that was out with her... no longer got along. The new one would chatter her teeth at the first one. That was about it. Nothing too serious. So because all three of them were running in a large open area they didn't really come up to each other. So I took my new chin and my afraidy cat chin into a smaller space. At first they hopped together checking out the new area. And then the new one went into cobra stance and started spraying. The other chin started chattering her teeth and leapt into my arms (which she always does when she's afraid and wants back in her cage). So I ended that and put all the chins into their separate cages.

I just want to know what else can be done. I just don't want to give up on my new chinnie.
 
Leave them seporate for a week or 2 before you try play time again. Was any blood drawn or just tuffs of hair? Can you tell if she was just defensive or was she the agressor? I never put the new chin in with a group in 'their' cage. It gives them home ground and I usually doesn't work for me. I alway use a new cage or a spare they havnt been in for a while. That way its just like the play area, no 8ne has dibs. Give them some time to settle, if you rush it now they may deside to hate eachother forever.
 
No blood was drawn and just some tuffs of fur. The problem with figuring out who is the aggressor and who is the defensive one is that I have one other chinchilla. Whom I'm guessing that is the "alpha" female of the pack. Since she started power humping and wagging her tail at her two cagemates. So her and my new one are currently at enemy status. But my new one attacks the other two. Kinda seems like a war between establishing a new leader. Though, the new one might just go into a defense stance from the other two. And no, the new one has never been in the other three's cage and vice versa. They all have only played together twice in the four (now five) days I have had the new one.
 
This is a chance you take when you try multiples in one cage. The established group can turn on each other and you could end up needing a separate cage for each chinchilla.

As mentioned, give it a week or so and the try again. If you can, have their cages side by side during this time. Once any fighting or bickering has stopped and they seem to be comfortable being next to each other in separate cages, you can give it another try. It might take more than a week or two to get this point but you do not want to rush things or you may never get them all together again. Also, shorten the playtime. Start with just a few minutes, unless of course they start fighting, and work you way up to longer periods. Always end playtime before they fight if you can.
 
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