Hello
I'm new to the Forum! About two weeks we got a 4 months female Syrian rescue hamster from a very trusted family-run rescue business. Marmalade (her name) is playful, interactive and displays all signs of normal hamster behaviour (we had a dwarf before; this is our first Syrian). However, a few days ago she started biting her cage bars and can do so for a very long time. She has a really big cage and lots of toys (we took this over when we got her from the rescue and the owner of the rescue who is super knowledgeable said the cage is perfect) and we take her out every evening in the play pen. She seems to like interacting with us and play, and as said, no other signs of stress. I have tried everything - more chewing toys, cardboard (she chews right through it no matter how long it takes, she manages to always get it off in the end), scattered treats, stale bread to chew on, you name it. There are a few possible explanations but I would love to hear people's thoughts on it:
1) She doesn't seem to be using her wheel. She sits on it and pees on it, but she doesn't use it (maybe at night but there are no signs that she does). So maybe there's a link? She has a big trixie wheel which we also took over. Should I maybe buy a new one? Or put this one in a different corner of the cage given the corner seems to be her peeing spot? But the other ones are quite expensive. Ours doesn't seem to have the covered front that most Trixie wheels have, I think the previous owner took it off - could that be a reason she doesn't use it? And putting the wheel somewhere else might disturb her even more.
2) After reading lots on cage cleaning here, I realised that I did a full on cage clean only after 10 days she'd been with us. I realise now that this should not be done - am so glad I came across the posts here. However, the gnawing started the day before the cage clean - but maybe that properly set her off? In which case - should I just wait for her to settle and be patient? I will definitely not do that again.
3) When she comes out during the day for short periods of time, she doesn't gnaw - she eats, digs, plays, and is generally calm. The cage gnawing always starts after she has returned to her cage after outside play time. Could that be a link? We do keep her out as long as we can and as long as she seems to want to. Should we maybe stop taking her out for a bit and see whether that changes anything?
Any other ideas, suggestions, thoughts? I'm running out of ideas of what to do - maybe I just need to wait and see?
I'm new to the Forum! About two weeks we got a 4 months female Syrian rescue hamster from a very trusted family-run rescue business. Marmalade (her name) is playful, interactive and displays all signs of normal hamster behaviour (we had a dwarf before; this is our first Syrian). However, a few days ago she started biting her cage bars and can do so for a very long time. She has a really big cage and lots of toys (we took this over when we got her from the rescue and the owner of the rescue who is super knowledgeable said the cage is perfect) and we take her out every evening in the play pen. She seems to like interacting with us and play, and as said, no other signs of stress. I have tried everything - more chewing toys, cardboard (she chews right through it no matter how long it takes, she manages to always get it off in the end), scattered treats, stale bread to chew on, you name it. There are a few possible explanations but I would love to hear people's thoughts on it:
1) She doesn't seem to be using her wheel. She sits on it and pees on it, but she doesn't use it (maybe at night but there are no signs that she does). So maybe there's a link? She has a big trixie wheel which we also took over. Should I maybe buy a new one? Or put this one in a different corner of the cage given the corner seems to be her peeing spot? But the other ones are quite expensive. Ours doesn't seem to have the covered front that most Trixie wheels have, I think the previous owner took it off - could that be a reason she doesn't use it? And putting the wheel somewhere else might disturb her even more.
2) After reading lots on cage cleaning here, I realised that I did a full on cage clean only after 10 days she'd been with us. I realise now that this should not be done - am so glad I came across the posts here. However, the gnawing started the day before the cage clean - but maybe that properly set her off? In which case - should I just wait for her to settle and be patient? I will definitely not do that again.
3) When she comes out during the day for short periods of time, she doesn't gnaw - she eats, digs, plays, and is generally calm. The cage gnawing always starts after she has returned to her cage after outside play time. Could that be a link? We do keep her out as long as we can and as long as she seems to want to. Should we maybe stop taking her out for a bit and see whether that changes anything?
Any other ideas, suggestions, thoughts? I'm running out of ideas of what to do - maybe I just need to wait and see?