Place the cage in a small room. Hide treats the dog enjoys in the cage. Because the dog fears the cage and takes it as a punishment the dog will soon start to see the cage as a suprise after finding the treats every time the dog will start to walk into the cage in its own whenever it wants to and stop crying or barking.
Well every day it should stay in its cage for about a couple of hours, but about 6 hours or more for sleeping unless you make a bed or sleep with it. But you shouldn't keep it in a cage for a really long time because it needs more space and fresh air, as well as company unless you have another rabbit.
Yes, it'd be best for the new hamster who is coming in to the cage. And would be much more sanitary.
You can!
Tall enough so that he can stand on his hind legs without his ears touching the "ceiling" of his cage, and wide enough so he can turn around comfortably. If he's a baby, get a cage that will fit him when he's grown. Try to get a big cage, so that if he doesn't get to run in the garden or house that much, at least he can hop around in his cage. Bunnies need at least three hours of time outside their cage daily for play, exercise, socialising, etc. If a bunny's cage is small, it needs even more time out. See the related links below for more info.
Put it in a comfortable cage with bedding and maybe a house (like a little den) in the cage and let it do it's own thing to get used to the cage for 24 hours, then handle it more and more every day so it gets used to humans. Enjoy your new rat
I think the term you want if "free ranged hens" it means that chickens can roam around fields our on end while cage chickens are born from eggs and put into a barn or a cage and they cant leave it they do get water and sunlight but they cant leave a bit like a prison they get food the only difference is that cage chickens tend to taste different and are much cheaper while free ranged take more money to keep them so they are more expansive and they taste better. An example of cage chicken is KFC and free ranged would be something that says on the box "free ranged" hope this helped
you should only get one bearded dragon at a time, unless you have separate cages. only one beardie should be put in one cage with no others, or they will fight for territory. you can get more than one beardie if you have more than one cage. hope this helped:)
9 or more hours
It all depends on how many rats you are getting. If you get one i think the cage can be a small one but i think it should at least have two levels. I live near a pets mart teat has a small two leveled cage. If you get two rats the cage should around double the size of the one rat cage. And so on. But if you don't understand this then go to the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xqy02HEy2eE If you need more rat info, this lady in the video (the one above) did more videos which i really like. Hope this helped!
YES! Maybe more often.
The price verys on the size of the cage..... The bigger the cage the more money..... The smaller the cage the less money.... And also if the cage comes with acessorys it will be more
A mouse can have a litter of 8 to 10 babies; some more, and some less.