Chinchilla Community Forums

Chinchillas => Memorials => Topic started by: baya on November 14, 2009, 10:56:40 PM

Title: New member
Post by: baya on November 14, 2009, 10:56:40 PM
Hi Everyone!
I signed up to be a member last night because my 11 year old daughter's baby was sick and I needed some advice. To my dismay this morning when I got home Baya was very lethargic and she finally passed away at 1:30 pm today. My daughter was and still is devastated. We are having her cremated. Does anyone have any suggestion getting a new chinchilla?
Title: Re: New member
Post by: chinclub on November 15, 2009, 10:40:48 AM
I am so sorry to hear about your chinchilla.  Do you know what caused the sickness?  If you post some symptoms, where she was kept, what she was fed, ect. we can help.  Then you will better know how to deal with getting another one and making sure the next one thrives. 

For example:
Was it an illness that require disinfecting before you get another
Was it genetic, in which case you'll want to find another breeder
Was it environmental, in which case you will want to make the necessary changes first.
Title: Re: New member
Post by: Jo Ann on November 15, 2009, 12:31:28 PM
 :hugs:   I am so sorry to hear you lost the little one. 

With chinchillas, the least little change from the norm can be a warning that something is wrong, long before it is evident that it is sick.  Chinchillas are very much creatures of habit ... when that changes, there can be trouble brewing in the background.

Something as simple as drinking 20 % less water or eating 20% less food.  OR the poops/feces being watery, having a covering of mucus, small and hard, or smaller in number, giving off a bad odor that is pungent ... it may sound crazy, but you can often tell more about what is wrong, or that something is going wrong, simply by the way the poop looks, smells or the number of 'little presents' it is or is not leaving.

As a general rule, when you finally realize a chin is sick because it looks sick, it's almost to late.  In the wild, they had to hide an illness or injury or become easy prey.  This trait is still with them today.

As Jamie said, please tell us everything you can about the chin for the last week ... even if you think it would not matter ... it may.

 ::wave::  Jo Ann