about two weeks
about 3 weeks
You may not take baby hamster from their mother until they are at least two weeks old!
Put whatever you're feeding to the baby hamster in an eye dropper or medicine dropper. Don't touch your baby hamster until they are three weeks. The mom will probably do the feeding, though.
If you touch the baby hamster, your scent will get on it and the mother will not reconized it. If you separate a hamster before it is three weeks old, then it can die. It needs it's mother for... Other purposes that it cannot give itself
don't touch them until they become 2 to 3 weeks old .. separate the father hamster from the mother hamster and the babies .
she is most likely rejecting it and you will need to immediately take the hamster away and care foe it youself until it is two weaks then it can care for itself.
Baby hamsters feed from their mother until they are 26 days old. It is recommended to separate the male and female hamsters afterwards to prevent fighting.
At around two weeks old.
You should not touch the baby hamsters until they are 6 weeks old. Don't play with the mother hamster. If you touch the baby hamsters before 4 weeks the mother hamster might eat her babies. Give extra food because the mother might think that there isn't enough food and kill some of her babies. Don't be surprised when the mother eats her baby because the baby might be sick. I never had a female hamster but I read all this from a book. Good Luck!
After your hamster has babies the mother will care for them. The puppies will have no fur and are very small. If a baby strays from the nest the mother will carry it back in her mouth. The mother will feed the hamster from her milk until three weeks. At 5 weeks the puppies arte ready to leave the mother. If the hamster is a syrian this is the age when it must be separtated from its brothers and sisters.
Yes they do. A mother hamster usually feeds the puppies for two weeks after they are born.
Hamsters drink milk from their mothers until they are three weeks old. After this they eat what their parents are eating. A small handful of dried food and a handful of fresh such as carrots or letice.