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This is a historic piece written a number of years ago.
A Hamster Diary – confessions of a new, inexperienced hamster owner
Subtitle – Don’t do what I did!
Note: Hamster balls are not really recommended these days.
Below is a diary of how we got our first hamster and all the mistakes we made, along with some insights into these wonderful little creatures. It’s quite long but hope you enjoy.
So we just acquired a hamster - I was so naive! Let's get a Hamster. Ok. We went to the local petshop which had two Hamsters and were recommended "this one because it's not a biter". The lady in the petshop kept telling us over and over how this one was just a baby. It looked big for a baby. I still don't know how old he is but he has grown to about 5 or 6" long and is too big for the Rotastak Space Command which I ordered before going back to pick up our bundle of fluff (or rather leaping, wriggling major handful of fluff that didn't like people holding him).
So - how to buy a Hamster. Do not do what I did. Do not find the only bit of space in the room where a Hamster home might possibly fit, measure it and then order something that fits the space. The Rotastak Space Command did - it wasn't too big, but went - up - different levels - I kidded myself this would be fine - Hamster would have plenty of floor space in a maisonette kind of way. All the levels are connected by yellow tubes. The dome at the top was yellow. I kidded myself that maybe it would be nice for the Hamster to see the world in yellow - or that maybe Hamsters were colour blind and had no idea what colour the world was. I knew nothing about Hamsters. We came home with Hammy the Hamster, and a bag of Hamster food. I have no idea what is in Hamster food. The Space Command was set up with bedding and water bottle and in went the Hamster. He looked very nervous and just sat at the bottom of the Space Command. After a couple of hours he went up a tube to the next level. But couldn't get down again - he kept bottling out. So he went up to the next level and got stuck at the top. Eventually we had to put a cardboard kitchen roll tube in the top unit, kindly given to us by the petshop, which he crawled into and we deposited him back in the bottom. Next morning he had got the hang of it and was shooting up and down the tubes and having a whale of a time.
Over the next two weeks he was taking treats from our hands and walking from the cardboard tube into the Hamster ball and running round the room in his ball. We still couldn't pick him up - I tried once putting my hand in the cage and he charged at me - I screamed and shut the lid. He was seeing me off. But by the third week he looked depressed - yes Hamsters can look depressed. Slept all the time and only got up for a wee or to get some food from the top unit - and then we noticed - he was almost getting stuck in the tubes. Hammy had grown into a giant Hamster and we reckon his Father must have been a guinea pig. By the second night of watching him struggling to get out of the top of a tube, and so clearly half stuck, I worried and had to do something and stayed up most of the night reading up about Hamster habitats, cages and sizes and had something ordered by 4am on Sunday to arrive Tuesday. I realised that Hammy had no option but to use the tubes - to get to his food in his yellow dining room. I was a terrible Hamster owner! I had chosen a unit that fitted our floor space instead of researching what kind of thing Hamsters need or how big they grow! Well they do sell them for Hamsters, but ignorance is no excuse - one size doesn't fit all and as I now know Rotastak units aren't suitable for Syrian Hamsters (or any hamsters). I spent the rest of the week-end getting creative with storage and rearranging the room to make a good place for the big cage I had ordered. This was quite a challenge, but very satisfying! Not only did I make space for the big cage but I now have more room space and a tidier room. Thank you Hamster, for giving me a challenge and making me creative.
The minimum cage size needs to be 80cm x 50cm apparently. We live in a rural area and get the odd mouse sometimes so I ordered one that was suitable for mice and Hamsters - keeps the odd mouse out. Having read up about what Hamsters need I realised that Hammy had been using a wheel that was far too small and would give him a back problem - a 29cm wheel was needed - it arrived with the cage. It took me all afternoon to set it up - and it looked - enormous! And rather good. The big 29cm wheel in one corner, a platform with a little pod house and a slide/ladder down to the base, a hanging bridge, a sputnik pod hanging from the top of the cage and a friendly log with dried carrot in the middle. That night, after Hammy had been out in his ball, we put him in. He had a good look round, seemed to enjoy exploring it, then got back in the ball and looked at me. I didn't put the lid on the ball. I didn't pick the ball up. I could see the look on his face changing to surprise and panic - he had been kidnapped! Tricked! I left him in the new cage and closed the door and oh the pangs of anguish I have now! The pangs of anguish, horror, shock in the look he gave me when he realised I was going to leave him in there and it wasn't just an adventure playground. In fact I think he can hear me thinking this now! He has suddenly stopped running in his wheel! Not only had I got him a totally unsuitable cage in the first place, I had traumatised him by moving him overnight into totally different surroundings. I went to bed feeling like a criminal.
Next morning we came down and he was sitting in the little pod. Realised he was going to have to sleep in the cage that day and started making a nest in it with the nesting material I had put in. For 10 days he ignored me. 10 days! He would come out, sit there shivering and looking terrified at all the space, wouldn't take a treat through the bars and completely cold-shouldered me. We were all getting a bit upset and anxious, thinking we had broken his trust and done something terrible. Hamsters get stressed by cage moves apparently. Black looks - lots of them - not hurt shocked looks any more - black looks and - disdain! Oooh it hurt! I would talk to him and say - I'm so sorry Hammy, we did it for your own good - you couldn't spend another night in there or you'd have got stuck in a tube and died. It made no difference - black looks. My other half, who didn't even want the Hamster, was getting worried about him and saying maybe we should put a cloth over the cage so he didn't feel so exposed. He hardly came out of his pod except to eat and then go back in again, but did seem to like the giant wheel, which he ran around at night. Hammy hated the cage and had turned into a distant, nervous Hamster. Other half said - maybe we should put him back in his old cage, it was cosier. Can't - he can't fit in the tubes. Maybe we got the wrong kind of cage - maybe we should have got an aquarium type tank cage like he had in the pet shop. By this time I had already forked out for two blooming Hamster homes - the first one was £40, the cage and extras was about £90 - getting to be an expensive exercise for a Hamster which cost £12. We decided to stick it out a few more days while the whole family worried about Hammy and couldn't enjoy watching TV in case the noise upset him. Then suddenly, almost to the dot of two weeks, he came alive again. Suddenly started looking brighter, took a treat from me - but still gave me a look as if to say - how could you do that to me - explored his cage, seemed to be having fun, started climbing the bars and jumping off things. Yay - he's happy! He loves the new cage now. We're all happy now.
A Hamster Diary – confessions of a new, inexperienced hamster owner
Subtitle – Don’t do what I did!
Note: Hamster balls are not really recommended these days.
Below is a diary of how we got our first hamster and all the mistakes we made, along with some insights into these wonderful little creatures. It’s quite long but hope you enjoy.
So we just acquired a hamster - I was so naive! Let's get a Hamster. Ok. We went to the local petshop which had two Hamsters and were recommended "this one because it's not a biter". The lady in the petshop kept telling us over and over how this one was just a baby. It looked big for a baby. I still don't know how old he is but he has grown to about 5 or 6" long and is too big for the Rotastak Space Command which I ordered before going back to pick up our bundle of fluff (or rather leaping, wriggling major handful of fluff that didn't like people holding him).
So - how to buy a Hamster. Do not do what I did. Do not find the only bit of space in the room where a Hamster home might possibly fit, measure it and then order something that fits the space. The Rotastak Space Command did - it wasn't too big, but went - up - different levels - I kidded myself this would be fine - Hamster would have plenty of floor space in a maisonette kind of way. All the levels are connected by yellow tubes. The dome at the top was yellow. I kidded myself that maybe it would be nice for the Hamster to see the world in yellow - or that maybe Hamsters were colour blind and had no idea what colour the world was. I knew nothing about Hamsters. We came home with Hammy the Hamster, and a bag of Hamster food. I have no idea what is in Hamster food. The Space Command was set up with bedding and water bottle and in went the Hamster. He looked very nervous and just sat at the bottom of the Space Command. After a couple of hours he went up a tube to the next level. But couldn't get down again - he kept bottling out. So he went up to the next level and got stuck at the top. Eventually we had to put a cardboard kitchen roll tube in the top unit, kindly given to us by the petshop, which he crawled into and we deposited him back in the bottom. Next morning he had got the hang of it and was shooting up and down the tubes and having a whale of a time.
Over the next two weeks he was taking treats from our hands and walking from the cardboard tube into the Hamster ball and running round the room in his ball. We still couldn't pick him up - I tried once putting my hand in the cage and he charged at me - I screamed and shut the lid. He was seeing me off. But by the third week he looked depressed - yes Hamsters can look depressed. Slept all the time and only got up for a wee or to get some food from the top unit - and then we noticed - he was almost getting stuck in the tubes. Hammy had grown into a giant Hamster and we reckon his Father must have been a guinea pig. By the second night of watching him struggling to get out of the top of a tube, and so clearly half stuck, I worried and had to do something and stayed up most of the night reading up about Hamster habitats, cages and sizes and had something ordered by 4am on Sunday to arrive Tuesday. I realised that Hammy had no option but to use the tubes - to get to his food in his yellow dining room. I was a terrible Hamster owner! I had chosen a unit that fitted our floor space instead of researching what kind of thing Hamsters need or how big they grow! Well they do sell them for Hamsters, but ignorance is no excuse - one size doesn't fit all and as I now know Rotastak units aren't suitable for Syrian Hamsters (or any hamsters). I spent the rest of the week-end getting creative with storage and rearranging the room to make a good place for the big cage I had ordered. This was quite a challenge, but very satisfying! Not only did I make space for the big cage but I now have more room space and a tidier room. Thank you Hamster, for giving me a challenge and making me creative.
The minimum cage size needs to be 80cm x 50cm apparently. We live in a rural area and get the odd mouse sometimes so I ordered one that was suitable for mice and Hamsters - keeps the odd mouse out. Having read up about what Hamsters need I realised that Hammy had been using a wheel that was far too small and would give him a back problem - a 29cm wheel was needed - it arrived with the cage. It took me all afternoon to set it up - and it looked - enormous! And rather good. The big 29cm wheel in one corner, a platform with a little pod house and a slide/ladder down to the base, a hanging bridge, a sputnik pod hanging from the top of the cage and a friendly log with dried carrot in the middle. That night, after Hammy had been out in his ball, we put him in. He had a good look round, seemed to enjoy exploring it, then got back in the ball and looked at me. I didn't put the lid on the ball. I didn't pick the ball up. I could see the look on his face changing to surprise and panic - he had been kidnapped! Tricked! I left him in the new cage and closed the door and oh the pangs of anguish I have now! The pangs of anguish, horror, shock in the look he gave me when he realised I was going to leave him in there and it wasn't just an adventure playground. In fact I think he can hear me thinking this now! He has suddenly stopped running in his wheel! Not only had I got him a totally unsuitable cage in the first place, I had traumatised him by moving him overnight into totally different surroundings. I went to bed feeling like a criminal.
Next morning we came down and he was sitting in the little pod. Realised he was going to have to sleep in the cage that day and started making a nest in it with the nesting material I had put in. For 10 days he ignored me. 10 days! He would come out, sit there shivering and looking terrified at all the space, wouldn't take a treat through the bars and completely cold-shouldered me. We were all getting a bit upset and anxious, thinking we had broken his trust and done something terrible. Hamsters get stressed by cage moves apparently. Black looks - lots of them - not hurt shocked looks any more - black looks and - disdain! Oooh it hurt! I would talk to him and say - I'm so sorry Hammy, we did it for your own good - you couldn't spend another night in there or you'd have got stuck in a tube and died. It made no difference - black looks. My other half, who didn't even want the Hamster, was getting worried about him and saying maybe we should put a cloth over the cage so he didn't feel so exposed. He hardly came out of his pod except to eat and then go back in again, but did seem to like the giant wheel, which he ran around at night. Hammy hated the cage and had turned into a distant, nervous Hamster. Other half said - maybe we should put him back in his old cage, it was cosier. Can't - he can't fit in the tubes. Maybe we got the wrong kind of cage - maybe we should have got an aquarium type tank cage like he had in the pet shop. By this time I had already forked out for two blooming Hamster homes - the first one was £40, the cage and extras was about £90 - getting to be an expensive exercise for a Hamster which cost £12. We decided to stick it out a few more days while the whole family worried about Hammy and couldn't enjoy watching TV in case the noise upset him. Then suddenly, almost to the dot of two weeks, he came alive again. Suddenly started looking brighter, took a treat from me - but still gave me a look as if to say - how could you do that to me - explored his cage, seemed to be having fun, started climbing the bars and jumping off things. Yay - he's happy! He loves the new cage now. We're all happy now.
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