>hello my friends is this a nice cage for my 2 gerbils??
>the 2 cages are 60*40 cm eich.
>how many gerbils could I place in here??
>open the attatchment file to see a pic of it.
>thanx

This is a Sam Safari cage (on the right) with the lookout
with the sliding door on the right, and the maze on the left.

I generally do not like the Sam Safari stuff....that little round
thing won't always stay on, you can't always keep the parts
locked...I have caught animals in the sliding part and killed
them trying to get them out.  [the part on the far right]

The locking bar on top of the main Sam cage won't always
stay in place, and if you can't get it in and to stay, the
cage literally falls apart.

The entire thing is very gnawable.  And you don't get any
advantages, as they will hang there and gnaw the bars...
and very rapidly gnaw other parts.

If you have one get at the little hinge clips of the door,
the door will literally fall off.

The plus about Sam cages is the plastic is an ultrahard
in the bottom pan of the main cage and gunk will come
off of it.

I got a number of these on clearance not long after they
came out...and experimented with what to keep in them.
I suggest they make great cages for dwarf campbell
hamsters, out of dwarf campbell, chinese dwarf, and
syrian hamsters, and gerbils.

Another drawback to Sam Safari, is that they do NOT
come with a waterbottle or provision to put one in.  I
fit a 5 oz Lixit waterbottle, hanging it from the wire
near the top locking bar from the wire by the door.

The first thing that happens to the nice enclosed quiet
running plastic wheel, is something gnaws the end locking
nubbie off it and you can't get replacements.  I retrofitted
mine with a standard free standing metal wheel on frame.

Gerbils gnaw up the upper shelf thing in no time, and
that thing is needed to add structural strength to the
entire cage system.

It looks cool.  The plastic is easier to clean.  None of the
parts of the cage have metal slat/mesh bottoms like
some of the SAM stuff does.

The setup as shown there is around $70-100 US, plus
having to retro a waterbottle in it...

And I'm afraid it doesn't live long under the assault of
a determined gnawer.  The first things to go will be the
ladder-up, the upper viewing thing; the hinges on the
door....then anywhere they can get a tooth on that plastic.

Plus it still gives you bars for them to gnaw on...and that
hard plastic can give really sharp edges when gone after.

Better you take your money and invest it in a large glass
aquarium with a good mesh lid.  It will have more longevity,
be easier to clean, more escape proof, and no bars for
your gerbils to rub their noses raw on AND keep you up
as they go grunch grunch grunch.

[I have tried everything put out by SAM, Cozy Critter, Play
City....and so on.  I went back to aquariums as the best
escape proof stuff for gerbils...and rate the other stuff as
varying for hamsters....]

As far as how many gerbils?  One pair.  If same sex,
a trio of males, a pair of females....  A breeding pair, you
have plenty of room for the pups.

Deb
Rebel's Rodent Ranch

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