I know full well I am wasting my time posting this but I'm going to do it anyway; in the hopes that it might be useful to other people who may read Dogooder's posts and think it's ok to treat a chinchilla in the same way.
Whilst I am sure you think you're doing a good thing for your chinchilla, you're not. You're causing her distress, whether you choose to accept that or not. Forcing her to stay in a confined, mesh trap is cruel.
Let me address some points:
I understand your concern because you've never heard of people picking up chins in a mesh bag, but I ask that you believe me that this creates virtually no stress for my chin. I think the combination of something completely new being done by a novice is what is causing the alarm. If it was something new recommended by an exotic animal vet than I would be considered more authoritative and more people would see this is a helpful technique.
Wong on all counts. No-one on this forum is going to believe you are not causing your chinchilla distress - for the simple reason you are inflicting a totally unnatural, trap situation on a prey animal and her behaviour reflects that.
Those of us with many years of experience keeping chins in a variety of settings are telling you that you are wrong - based on observation, not anthropomorphic, emotional projection (which is what you are doing).
It's got nothing to do with you being a newby, it's got to do with you being completely incorrect about chinchilla behaviour.
If it was recommended by an exotic vet, I'd be looking for a proper, chinchilla competent vet!
And I'm working on a mesh sling to carry my chin like a human baby in front of me because she doesn't like carry cages. I make these things because the material is soft, flexible, breathable, and therefore gentle on her rather than the hard, harsh alternatives of the tough harness ropy fiber and metal cage.
Why??? If you want to bond with your chin, let her out in a chinchilla safe room and
let her interact with you naturally! Let
her express and exhibit her normal behaviours rather than forcing her to do what
you want - which is to sit with you like some small, fluffy toy.
Chins have emotions very similar to humans
As others have already said, no they don't. You like to project your emotions onto your chinchilla but that doesn't mean it is so.
If I’m watching a movie and suddenly there’s an action scene with loud violence she stops purring and starts biting and wanting to leave.
Do you think this is normal behaviour for a prey animal? Seriously, you think it is acceptable and not stressful to keep a prey animal trapped in a mesh bag, while they nip to get out and run away from danger?
The natural behaviour for a prey animal is to (sometimes freeze for a second) then run and hide from danger - anyone who actually lets their chinchilla exhibit normal behaviour will tell you that when they are out running about, being curious, if they are startled by an unfamiliar or loud noise they will bolt to their safe place.
Not allowing them to bolt is stressful.
Your chin keeps still and tucks down in the bag because she is scared not because she is enjoying the experience and is keeping still 'because she is happy' - behavior, not anthropomorphism.
It’s crystal clear to me that she purrs when she’s happy and she only purrs when she’s comforted by the soft mesh. The woman who owned her before said she loved hanging from the faux fur hammock at the top level of her cage, so even at her other home my chin loved to hang high inside a soft surface and look down at the room.
In the wild chins spend most of the day hiding in burrows and under rocks and looking out, so they like to feel protected and keep watch. They’re also used to associating with other softy, furry companions. I guess the reason my chin likes the mesh so much is that it’s soft and yielding and provides a cover where she can feel safe and look outside at the world.
The purring issue has been addressed but, again,
seriously?? How can you possibly think it is not stressful for a chin to be hung from the ceiling in a bag she can't get out of?
There's a world of difference between a chin snoozing on a hammock in a suitable chinchilla cage where they can choose to get off and on at will than being suspended several feet in the air, unable to get out of a trap.
Chinchillas are rock hoppers, not arboreal climbing animals. The clue is in there - they spend their days in hollows and under rocks; ie. on/in the ground!
Just because other chinchillas don’t purr doesn’t mean my chinchilla doesn’t purr. All chinchillas have different personalities and act differently. At the end of the day the most important thing is to carefully observe your chinchilla. I know when my chinchilla is happy and when she’s upset and I quickly stop something that’s upsetting her, for example, she could only stand being in her carry cage for 2 minutes outside today so after only 2 minutes I took her out to avoid traumatizing her.
Yes, I agree careful, objective observation is the key - not what you are doing which is anthropomorphism. There are people on this forum who have been carefully and objectively observing chinchillas for 15+ years who are telling you that you are wrong ....... why is it that you think we are all wrong and you're right?
Why did you think it necessary to take your chinchilla outside in a carry cage anyway? What made you decide she was distressed?
And while you may not think chins have emotions like humans I believe they do, not exactly the same but they have typical feelings that humans have such as happiness, sadness, fear, embarrassment, etc. It's something I've observed.
Explain how a chin behaves when it is embarrassed?
Embarrassment is an emotional state of intense discomfort with oneself, experienced upon having a socially unacceptable act or condition witnessed by or revealed to others.
Now you are suggesting that chinchillas know what is socially acceptable behaviour and also know when they have broken said acceptable social norms?
What comes through very clearly in your posts is that you want to inflict your beliefs and desire for companionship (
on your terms) onto your chinchilla. You want a chin that just sits quietly in a bag slung around your neck so that you can feel comforted.
I'm going to be blunt and say that you should get a furry toy instead and stop treating your chinchilla like one - if you
really want to experience true chinchilla behaviour, let her do what she wants. If she wants to interact with you she will and if she doesn't she wont. Let her out in a chinchilla safe room, lie on the floor with her watching TV and see if she comes to you.