SkyWarrior
Loving the herd life
I don't usually do this, but I don't know where to turn on this one.
I just got my new llama (Nick) today and had put him into the pen that I split in two with field fence. Sid is on one side and Nick on the other. Both Sid and Nick are neutered males.
There was a bit of fussing and posturing and Sid, my first llama was acting freaked out for a while.
I give them both food (their containers are on opposite sides) and water and let them be.
A few hours later, I come back to feed them, check their water for the night and see how they are. Nick is in Sid's pen. Somehow Nick pulled the field fencing down between them and came over to the other side. No blood or spit. Nobody is upset, until I enter the pen. Then, the posturing begins and they act like they're going to spit at each other. I feed them and Sid is acting like an idiot. I put a halter on him and walk him around outside the pen to calm him down and then he goes back in. Everyone is okay, but Sid is acting weird.
I leave and when I pick up firewood, I find Nick lying down and Sid eating calmly from the bucket Nick was eating from. I don't know why they get aggressive the moment I show up, but seem to be fine when I'm away (resource guarding?)
So, I'm worried about a couple of things. One is will Nick try to do a Houdini and escape the pens? They're 6 foot tall chainlink panels. Only the ends aren't attached to the barn, but I do have rocks holding them in place. Granted, we just had the field fence kind of attached to the barn (didn't have a good way to secure it).
Second, am I an idiot to not try to separate them again? Will I end up with bloody llamas? Is their behavior something akin to resource guarding, where I am the resource? Does Sid, despite his weird behavior, think he needs to establish himself as dominate llama when I'm around?
Help! I need to know.
I just got my new llama (Nick) today and had put him into the pen that I split in two with field fence. Sid is on one side and Nick on the other. Both Sid and Nick are neutered males.
There was a bit of fussing and posturing and Sid, my first llama was acting freaked out for a while.
I give them both food (their containers are on opposite sides) and water and let them be.
A few hours later, I come back to feed them, check their water for the night and see how they are. Nick is in Sid's pen. Somehow Nick pulled the field fencing down between them and came over to the other side. No blood or spit. Nobody is upset, until I enter the pen. Then, the posturing begins and they act like they're going to spit at each other. I feed them and Sid is acting like an idiot. I put a halter on him and walk him around outside the pen to calm him down and then he goes back in. Everyone is okay, but Sid is acting weird.
I leave and when I pick up firewood, I find Nick lying down and Sid eating calmly from the bucket Nick was eating from. I don't know why they get aggressive the moment I show up, but seem to be fine when I'm away (resource guarding?)
So, I'm worried about a couple of things. One is will Nick try to do a Houdini and escape the pens? They're 6 foot tall chainlink panels. Only the ends aren't attached to the barn, but I do have rocks holding them in place. Granted, we just had the field fence kind of attached to the barn (didn't have a good way to secure it).
Second, am I an idiot to not try to separate them again? Will I end up with bloody llamas? Is their behavior something akin to resource guarding, where I am the resource? Does Sid, despite his weird behavior, think he needs to establish himself as dominate llama when I'm around?
Help! I need to know.