
Start with the safest step
Start with the real home: sleep, doors, children, other pets, heat, travel, budget, and backup care.
Updated
Small mammal question
Introduce a new small mammal by placing it into a prepared quiet habitat, limiting handling at first, monitoring food and water, and following the right companion rules for that animal.
Include children, other pets, budget, and travel before adoption.

Start with the real home: sleep, doors, children, other pets, heat, travel, budget, and backup care.

Household answers change by species because sleep time, handling tolerance, escape risk, heat sensitivity, social rules, and legal rules differ.
The household plan should name the adult in charge before travel, children, or other pets complicate care.

Name the adult caregiver, backup plan, quiet space, other-pet rules, and travel limits before the animal arrives.
The household plan should name the adult in charge before travel, children, or other pets complicate care.

Predator access, mixed-species housing, unsupervised handling, heat, travel stress, and impulse purchases create preventable emergencies.
Set the child, other-pet, door, heat, travel, and backup-care rules before the animal is in the house.
No. The page gives the practical rule, then the species profile should decide the final housing, food, handling, and vet plan.
Ask an exotic-pet veterinarian promptly for appetite loss, fewer droppings, labored breathing, collapse, severe lethargy, wounds, heat stress, or sudden weight change.