tcraighenry
Well-known member
I've seen a lot on here about necropsies on chinchillas after they pass away unexpectedly.
We didn't have one on Christopher when he passed, though I suspect I know what happened. They didn't come from the best place when we got them. They had a cage with no ledges, the bedding smelled like bark dust (it wasn't, it just had that kind of smell) and had been in a barn with a heater.
We made the awful mistake of having him neutered too soon after we got him and he didn't make it. Our vet offered but it was going to cost another $200 after we were already out of pocket for $400.
I read a lot about having this done on the forums and I can see the logic. But in my experience pets pass away, it's just kind of what happens. Not to say you don't do everything you can but they do die.
So I'm torn, I think it's a good idea but at the same time, I wonder if it would actually make a difference. Any experience with this good or bad? What was the outcome if you had one? Did it make a difference to your other chins?
We didn't have one on Christopher when he passed, though I suspect I know what happened. They didn't come from the best place when we got them. They had a cage with no ledges, the bedding smelled like bark dust (it wasn't, it just had that kind of smell) and had been in a barn with a heater.
We made the awful mistake of having him neutered too soon after we got him and he didn't make it. Our vet offered but it was going to cost another $200 after we were already out of pocket for $400.
I read a lot about having this done on the forums and I can see the logic. But in my experience pets pass away, it's just kind of what happens. Not to say you don't do everything you can but they do die.
So I'm torn, I think it's a good idea but at the same time, I wonder if it would actually make a difference. Any experience with this good or bad? What was the outcome if you had one? Did it make a difference to your other chins?