People give different answers for this. I was told by my local pet shop that its best not to put a guinea pig with a rabbit becasue rabbits tend to be aggressive towards guinea pigs. Some rabbits try to have sexual intercorse with the guinea pig, and end up killing it. However, please don't take my advice as the right one. Becasue i do know that rabbits can be fine with guinea pigs. Soem rabbits and guinea pigs get on just fine!!! And the rabbit will potty-train the guinea pig to go to the toilet in one corner. So it all depends if the rabbit is fine with living with the guinea pig, but there is no way of tellign until you actually put the together. So i have never done it, just in case. I think it would be arlgith to put them together from birth, so there used to it, but if you force them together , halfway though their life you don't really know whats going to happen. so it don't thinks its safe,
it depends on the owners age guinea pigs do well with children and rabbits require more work so they are better with older ages.
They usually do this to mark their territory! Although it is usually the older rabbit that is more territorial... Hi jedward.fan13 here...I have a rabbit who is 3 years old and recently I adopted a baby rabbit, but the baby rabbit seems to keep peeing on the older one, Do you think this might be because the baby rabbit hasn't been spayed yet and the older one has?
Yes, they do learn faster than the older ones.
no, because they will fight and may die
As it gets older, a girl rabbit develops a large, fluffy "chin". I didn't know my rabbit's gender until an older age, about 1-2 years old.
because the little guinea pig likes the older one
It means that the rabbit is scared. Try obsevering what you do to make it scared. Some times my rabbit is scared to come out of her hutch, so I leave her alone for 5 minutes. You should also get into a schedule, rabbits then get excited when you pull out the fresh food! Not that, but if you start playing with a tennisball when it is little the rabbit will like it when he/ she gets older!
the older sister
While there are some breeders who suggest that rabbits and guinea pigs should not be kept together, our experience has been very positive (with one male rabbit and a male and female guinea pig kept together in the same hutch). The reasons sometimes cited for not keeping them together include (a) the guinea pig being hurt (perhaps accidentally) by a wayward kick from the rabbit and/or (b) that guinea pigs kept in isolation can suffer from 'behavioural disorders'. Both animals are social in the wild but countless examples of them being kept either alone or with a member of the other species suggest that success or failure in doing this has more to do with the temperament of the individual animals concerned. Clearly, if being kept together results in repeated fighting, then remove the animals to separate cages. Otherwise, injury will likely result (probably worse for the guinea pig). Also, make sure to provide the guinea pigs with extra vitamin c in the form of foods high in this or supplements in their water. Like I say, our experience has been very positive so far.
Guinea Pigs poke with their nose to show greetings,emotions,etc.It is like saying hello to that Guinea Pig.
It depends how old your rabbit is. It can have milk when it is extremely young, but when it gets older, you need to give is water.
Getting Older....