pandachan
Active member
Hello,
I currently have a 8mo female chin, named Baby Chin. She's a sweetie, playful, energetic, nice temperament. Honestly, I think she's happy by herself. But my husband and I do work full time, and though Baby Chin gets at least 2 hours a day of out of cage play time I wonder if she'd be happier with constant company from another chin.
I was on craigslist (you know where this is going) and I saw a younger chin (3mo) that needs to be re-homed. Here's the ad:
http://honolulu.craigslist.org/oah/pet/4364630480.html
I heard that there's a greater chance for acceptance if you introduce a new younger chin into the environment of an older chin. Please correct me if that's wrong.
Also, I realize adopting another chin means there's a chance they will never get along and might have to house them separately forever. I'm prepared for that. But, even with that aside, I'm concerned about her paw. I'm wondering if missing a paw is a sign of more health issues to come?
Thoughts, anyone?
I currently have a 8mo female chin, named Baby Chin. She's a sweetie, playful, energetic, nice temperament. Honestly, I think she's happy by herself. But my husband and I do work full time, and though Baby Chin gets at least 2 hours a day of out of cage play time I wonder if she'd be happier with constant company from another chin.
I was on craigslist (you know where this is going) and I saw a younger chin (3mo) that needs to be re-homed. Here's the ad:
http://honolulu.craigslist.org/oah/pet/4364630480.html
I heard that there's a greater chance for acceptance if you introduce a new younger chin into the environment of an older chin. Please correct me if that's wrong.
Also, I realize adopting another chin means there's a chance they will never get along and might have to house them separately forever. I'm prepared for that. But, even with that aside, I'm concerned about her paw. I'm wondering if missing a paw is a sign of more health issues to come?
Thoughts, anyone?