Yes, i will re-iterate this as well. I do not plan on breeding this male. He was purchased from a breeder here for Salem first. She was in bad shape mentally after being rejected and was losing weight and very withdrawn. It meant that i had to buy a second cage and take on the responsibility of having two cages to clean every morning and two playtimes for the pair and then the individual chin. It was worth it for me and i have the ability to give all three equal amounts of love. Even if it means i now wake up at 3:30am to clean them out before i go to work
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Also, pyrometra is nothing to take lightly. It is something that will come back eventually. Salem had two prior bouts with open pyrometra the year before. I was trying to avoid surgey at all costs because it is super high risk. This time it came back as closed pyrometra and she almsot did not survive. Luckily, she responded well to the baytril and it got her to a point where an operation was able to be performed. If i knew the pyrometra was going to keep coming back i would have opted for the spaying after the first time. I simply didn't know much about the ailment.
I would advise, as stated above, to never ever put a chinchilla through surgery unless it is to save their life. Obviously there are people who get their males neutered and it is supposed to be a much simpler process but personally, i would not risk it. A chinchilas recovery is not a simple process.
This chinchilla was extremely close to dying. Thankfully my vet was good and confident in her ability. The team was great and they sll said they fell in love with her post-op.