I would definitely go for a hutch with at least a plastic bottom to it. Guinea pig wee tends to seep into everthing and is very potent. From my experience there is no getting that smell out of wood! the wipe clean option is a must. remember to have wooden chew toys or sticks around their cage in order to let them gnaw to keep their teeth from over growing.
in summary..plastic is a big yes!
No! This would be very cruel. Guinea pigs need to live in specially made indoor cages or outdoor hutches.
Cage: Midwest guinea habitat.... hut: plastic igloo
put them in a separate cage/massive plastic container and chop up veges VERY finely. That's what we did when ours didnt suckle
Depends on the Guinea Pig - also on the cage. I keep my guinea pigs in an open-bottomed cage.
No its not, i guinea pigs cage is way bigger. & you should not have the same size of guinea pig cage as your hampster.
because guinea pigs are aggressive
For two guinea pigs you need at least 7.5 feet of cage.
Yes, they can but not together WITH the guinea pigs.
dried up guinea pig pee.
guinea pigs
A net or cage
no
Yes the minimum for two guinea pigs is 7.5 feet so that's a good cage.