Weekly plan

Guinea Pig weekly feeding plan

Use this weekly plan to prepare safe variety without creating a complicated recipe system or mixing too many new foods at once.

The feeding formula

unlimited grass hay + vitamin C-aware produce + species pellets + careful fresh-food rotation. This is a planning frame for safe decisions, not a complete homemade-diet prescription.

  • Start with the species-appropriate diet base: grass hay plus vitamin C produce.
  • Check each food individually before adding it to a snack, topper, or enrichment idea.
  • Use veterinary guidance for special diets, illness, toxic exposure, or long-term homemade feeding.

Feeding guide

Guinea Pig weekly feeding plan: practical rules

These notes are written for cautious owners who want useful food ideas without drifting into unsafe table scraps or unbalanced recipe plans.

Weekly rhythm

  • Plan a familiar daily vitamin C produce anchor, then rotate small supporting greens.
  • Keep fruit rare and tiny; use it as a moment, not as the produce plan.
  • Check hay freshness, pellet date, and uneaten wet produce every day.

Foods to check before the week starts

  • yogurt drops, meat, eggs, dairy, nuts, seeds, onion, garlic, chocolate, avocado, moldy hay, and spoiled produce.
  • rabbit pellets as a swap, cereal-style mixes, and fruit-heavy snack cups.

Food checks linked from this guide

Open each food page before feeding. The individual page gives the species-specific verdict, preparation notes, watch-outs, FAQ, and source references.

More guinea pigs feeding guides

FAQ

What is the safest feeding structure for guinea pigs?

Guinea Pigs should keep grass hay plus vitamin C produce as the foundation. Extras should be plain, small, species-appropriate, and easy to stop if appetite or digestion changes.

Are these guinea pigs formulas complete homemade diets?

No. They are snack templates, feeding structure notes, and food-safety checks. They are not complete diet replacements or veterinary nutrition prescriptions.

When should a guinea pig owner ask a veterinarian?

Ask a veterinarian for toxic exposure, illness, special diets, prescription foods, pregnancy, growth, chronic disease, sudden appetite changes, or any plan that would replace the normal diet.