Kept white mice!
Last letters become first - March 26
It’s been a while so I will start us off…….whats for supper and why?
Kept white mice!
A lovely big Teddy each?
At one stage in my childhood when I wasn't allowed an animal I had a pet coconut, won at a funfair. We called him Humphrey and he was really easy to look after. he had such a cute little face and used to sit on the sideboard and watch us. 
I agree about the cat, but they will soon be homeless and penniless so the future is a big unknown at the moment. We just thought a small pet could move with him. He and older siblings are all behaving badly at the moment, I can understand why DD is being soft, but they need boundaries! Anyway, that is whole other story!
So why not cat. They are a lot better company that the small furry animals more strokable and need less nurturing.
Make Soop an offer for Rory. He might cost you though.
#hidesfromsoop.
Thank you for all the answers. I still don't know what to do! The other family of GCs have done the bearded dragon thing and grown bored so gave it away. I really want GS to have something to stroke without being bitten, as the family is going through a tough time at the moment (his dad has b**gg***d off with DD's friend), and he would benefit from some calm moments I think.
If you get two gerbils make absolutely sure that they are two males (brothers) or two females (sisters) If you get two of the same sex but unrelated they will fight. If you get one of each you will end up with several million gerbils.
The babies can get through a gap you would have trouble pushing a knitting needle through.
We kept gerbils in a birdcage with the base taken off and the whole thing fixed over a fish-tank that was about the same size. We half-filled the tank with sawdust and added a ladder that led up to the partly-floored cage. They were very busy digging around in the sawdust, but it didn't get kicked out and over everything, and they could be seen working away. They loved chewing up paper and cardboard to make nests in their burrows. We put in kitchen roll inners for them to run through. the inevitable babies enjoyed that.
Once we put in a tube that was narrower than usual. The babies were fine with it, but Mum kept trying to follow them through and got stuck every time. She seemed not to grasp that it was her child-bearing hips that would not get in, and she should back out - she just kept scrabbling to try to go forwards. After rescueing her half-a-dozen times we took that tube out.
I put one guinea pig out in the sun after he'd had a bath and he collapsed with sunstroke. My ex, who'd just come back from a run and realised how hot it was outside, had to resuscitate him. One of my bosses used to have rats [think she still does] and when I used to babysit for her I'd sometimes find a rat down the back of the sofa. Someone was telling me the other day of someone he used to deliver to that used to have a pet rat draped round his shoulders. I loved our 'guinea pig years'. A friend of mine bought a pregnant female and the babies were adorable. For years whenever I went to a pet shop to buy dog food I used to say as I walked through the door 'please don't let me buy a guinea pig' because I love them. Although they're bad news for anyone that suffers from asthma. I've know people with 'house rabbits' as well, that are house trained. that wouldn't work for me because I can't even get dogs or cats house trained.
That should have taken you to Kids Corner.
Does it have to be a mammal?
consider this instead
Great minds about the rats Tegan. I did quite well with the gerbils but didnt have a good track record with guinea pigs 
I'd forgotten about Russian hamsters. Savage little beasts!
Gerbils make lovely pets. They are not strictly nocturnal (unlike hamsters), rarely bite, and are a good size for a child to handle. They prefer to be with another gerbil but don't need too much space as long as they are played with and allowed out to explore regularly. They are not difficult to catch. Hamsters are sweet but spend a lot of the day asleep.
Having said all that, and I know it's not to everyone's taste, but I would consider a rat. They are lovely, intelligent animals who connect with humans far more than any other small pet I have ever known. I was horrified when DD decide to get a pair as a teenager but can honestly say that I became very fond of them. They do not bite and are also a good size to handle. They like to be kept in pairs as well and do need quite a lot of space, which may be a problem.
Charleygirl; they have even shorter lives when owned by a numpty like me
.
Hamsters can be a bit nasty I think. I had a really sweet one [Minnie]but I'm not sure that they're all nice. But, if you do get one with a nice temperament you can at least handle them. You can keep more than one Russian hamster but I don't think you can handle them. You can't handle gerbils because they move so fast. I had two in a small'ish cage so I treated them to a real state of the art cage but, unknown to me the bars of the cage were slightly wider apart and the cat got his claws through and killed one of them. They're probably more fun to watch and a little boy would probably like all the tunnels and tubing.I think I used to put mine in the bath when I cleaned the cage out, because they couldn't get up the sides of it. My daughter put their hamster in his exercise ball one night and forget he was there and the next morning he was still going round and round the living room [this was when she'd grown up and left home]. Strangely enough, even though I've got a rat problem in my garden and I'm working out how I can kill them I'd love a pet rat. I've wanted one ever since I saw someone at the vets sitting with his pet rat sitting on the bench next to him. And I knew someone else that had a pet rat called Nancy [named after his ex girlfriend] that used to live in his pocket. [sad postscript; I found Minnie dead in her cage one day and buried her in the garden. Years later I read that hamsters can go into a coma if they're scared, and we'd had some rather noisy work done in the house. I still worry that I buried her alive
].
I only have experience of cats which would be totally unsuitable but what springs to my mind is that these animals do not live very long, 2-3 years and a child can become very attached in a short space of time. Maybe I am being negative.
My 8 year old GS wants a small pet for his tiny bedroom. Has anyone any experience of hamsters and gerbils, and which is more suitable? Noise at night is no problem as he hears nothing once his head hits the pillow, but how much time does a hamster spend awake in the day? I think they are solitary and gerbils like a same-sex friend, but does that mean a larger cage? I have seen some compact 3 tier spaceship-style ones with tubes.
All pros and cons would be welcome please.
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