Guinea pig fleece needs absorbent layers, daily spot-cleaning, hay management, and a dependable laundry rhythm. Fleece works only when it stays dry enough to protect feet and skin.
Look at habitat, health, and cleaning rhythm together.
Clean the right spots first
Start with the adult habitat and the animal's natural behavior, not the smallest product that looks convenient.
Check adult size, bedding depth, wheel or tube fit, ventilation, chew points, escape gaps, water placement, cleaning reach, and fall risk.
Housing differs by species
Housing answers change by species because floor space, depth, climbing, ventilation, and escape risk do not work the same way.
The cleaning rhythm should control wet areas and odor without stripping every familiar scent at once.
Build around the behavior
Build the adult habitat around the behavior in the question: burrowing, running, chewing, climbing, hiding, or escape testing.
The cleaning rhythm should control wet areas and odor without stripping every familiar scent at once.
Remove unsafe setup signs
Bar chewing, pacing, escape attempts, trapped feet, damp bedding, blocked water, heavy chewing, or sleep disruption means the setup needs a closer look.
Measure the adult enclosure, bedding depth, wheel or tube fit, escape gaps, chew risk, ventilation, and cleaning reach before buying gear.
Before you decide
Does the habitat fit the adult animal's normal behavior?
Are bedding depth, wheel or tube fit, water, hides, and cleaning access right?
Can the animal escape, fall, chew a hazard, get trapped, or lose sleep?
Have you opened the species housing guide before buying gear?
Next best moves
Find the wet spot, stale food, fabric, or litter miss before adding any new product.
Use unscented materials and protect the animal's breathing.
Change the layout if odor returns right after cleaning.
Common cleaning questions
Does this answer apply to every small mammal?
No. The page gives the practical rule, then the species profile should decide the final housing, food, handling, and vet plan.
When should I ask a veterinarian?
Ask an exotic-pet veterinarian promptly for appetite loss, fewer droppings, labored breathing, collapse, severe lethargy, wounds, heat stress, or sudden weight change.