Monty's Manor
Chronicles of Chinchilla Keeping in the UK

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Bella’s Kit Update and Leila Joins in the Fun

Posted in Animals, Breeding, Chinchillas, Health, Husbandry, Pets  by Claire on September 22nd, 2008

Bella’s kit is a male (checked earlier today) and he seems to be doing pretty well. He is getting to grips with the whole suckling thing and Bella appears to be finally settling down to motherhood. He’s a cutey – very quiet and shy. He’s also very small, weighing 44g yesterday but surprisingly (kits usually lose weight in the first 24 hours or so before the mother’s milk comes in) he had gained 1g today. :)

Here is the little chap:

Bellas Kit

"Shorty"

I popped into the chin room this morning to check on “Shorty” (I do hope that name does not stick – like “Thug“) and from the corner of my eye I noticed that Leila had gone into labour. She’s not due until Monday and I was on my way out to Roman & Jane’s Chinchilla Rescue to help out – I made a quick phonecall to Jane to tell her that Leila had changed my plans for me and I would be late. I then started hopping from foot to foot and banged on Talie’s door so she could watch the kits being born.

Leila is another Manor character. She is feisty and can be a real stroppy madam when she wants to be but I love her dearly and she has the ability to always make me smile. One of her favourite hobbies is taking off my glasses. I got her about 4 years ago from a breeder who literally gave her to me because she had a couple of tiny (5 pence piece sized) fur chew marks on her hip and so was of no use to the breeder at all.

I brought her home to The Manor and settled her into a cage which was just about at eye level and spent weeks slowly and carefully interacting with her. This is when I discovered she liked my glasses. It took all of a couple of days for Leila to settle into The Manor and she stopped fur chewing instantly; it was clearly stress/boredom related. With some toys and gentle attention Leila turned into a beautiful chinchilla – both in character and in body.The only time she has ever shown any sign of fur chewing again was when I moved her to a cage she did not like – it was too high for her and she could not “chat” to me quite so readily. She took one small nibble of her fur in exactly the same place as when she originally arrived. Moving her back to an eye level cage stopped the habit again – so now she stays in the same cage level and is perfectly happy.

Leila’s last litter produced two cracking standards (Griselda and Genville) who both won group awards – Griselda won a 3rd (dark standard female group) at the National in April 2006 which I was very chuffed with since these were the first standard chinchillas I had bred. Grenville now lives the life O’Reilly with a friend of mine, shares a cage with a chin that Debbie bred called Moley (big, squishy, cuddly lump of a chin!), and still managed to win 1st, Reserve Best Adult Standard Male and Reserve Best Standard at a show last September (Southern Region) – that’s not bad going for a 3 year old. :D

Both Grenville and Griselda have inherited Leila’s character – George, their father (and the father of the latest litter) is quiet, a bit aloof but absolutely amazing as a breeding male – he is suave and very gentle with his girlies and never misses a trick. Currently he’s looking a bit porky because he’s got 3 females and he pops up in each cage when you go round with the treats – if you’re not paying attention he’s snaffled 3 treats before you’ve noticed! :lol:

Currently it is difficult to tell which of the two chins is pregnant – as this photo demonstrates :)

George (on the shelf) and Leila - Chinchilla pair

George (on the shelf) and Leila a few days ago

Thankfully Leila’s labour was pretty uneventful – she had triplets this time: 2 females and a male. She was pretty tired by the end of it and when she finally expelled the placentas I did not let her eat them. I removed them, gave her a raisin instead, and left her to settle with the kits.

Talie took some excellent photos – will upload them tomorrow. Right now I’m off to watch the kits settle with their mother. :)

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Griselda’s Triplets – Update

Posted in Animals, Chinchillas, General, Pets  by Claire on July 19th, 2007

Life here continues apace. Thug and his siblings are growing rapidly, are nibbling pellets and hay and are developing their individual characters. They are spending some time in the cage next to their mother drinking formula from the bottle and then they are rotated again. Thug loves spending time with his Mum – I think he’s a bit of a whimp really.
Here is Thug looking angelic.

Chinchilla Kit - "Thug"

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Triplets Update

Posted in Animals, Breeding, Chinchillas, Health, Husbandry, Pets  by Claire on July 7th, 2007

The triplets are doing quite well. Putting on weight and starting to ping about their cage. Gris is doing a great job with them and is coping with the me swapping them around several times a day – not bad for a first time mum.

Thug has been at work with me all week – he has successfully made the transition from taking formula from a pipette to drinking it out of a mouse bottle. I took the bottle with me on Tuesday and by lunch time (second feed using the bottle) he’d managed to grasp the concept of using his lower jaw to “bite” the ball bearing to release the milk. It’s amazing really how quickly these little kits adapt to changes in their environment and in their “food delivery” systems – survival and adaptability are two of the chinchillas most basic instincts but they are incredibly well developed, even from birth. It’s truly fascinating to watch and provides a real learning opportunity.

The two other kits (as yet nameless) are doing very well too. Like their brother, they have adapted well to the schedule of rotation and are also drinking formula from a mouse bottle when they are not in with their mother. The bottle is hung from the cage at a height they can easily reach and the formula is warmed a couple of times and then completely changed with a sterilised bottle and freshly made formula. This prevents any bacterial build up in the bottle and protects the kits from gastro-intestinal upset which can be fatal in young chinchillas.

I need to take some more pictures of both sets of kits this weekend (the triplets and the twins) so I might do it when I clean out the chins later. It is interesting watching how kits change in body shape over time; going from the gangly, big-headed first born to the “mini-chin” body shape at a few weeks old. It is also interesting to see the colouring change in some of the mutation chinchilla kits are they develop too – the velvets are fascinating as their veiling and face “mask” develops.

I’ve written an article about The Charcoal Mutation and its Derivatives on Chinchillas Unlimited because there seems to be a lot of confusion around the difference between a charcoal and an ebony – pure recessive charcoals are rare and the mutation is often (frustratingly!) confused with ebony.

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