Originally Posted by
CritterMom
He is adorable! My second hand raised baby mouse is now an adult who makes it clear that he judges me and finds me wanting. And after all of those through the night feedings! There are lots of other people here that have done the same with baby mice. You are just fine here.
What you are seeing on his tummy is: yellow is what is called the "milk line" because it is literally the line in the stomach that the formula you just fed him has reached. The skin is so thin you can see inside the body. The dark things are his skin, internal organs, etc. He looks perfect to me. As his formula digests, that yellow line gets smaller and smaller until it is gone and he needs to eat again.
I am a little leery about the kitten formula. It is an absolute NO for squirrels, but given that he is just about on all solid foods at this point, I would just watch him closely. It causes diarrhea in squirrels. But it sounds like his poops are fine and I don't like the idea of messing with "fine."
The open mouthed behavior when feeding just blew my mind. We see this all the time with baby squirrels - in fact we call it "guppy mouth" because that is what it looks like. It is a seizure of sorts that is brought on while feeding and no, nobody knows why one does it and the other does not. You are doing the right thing - you want to immediately stop pushing the feeding syringe so you aren't putting formula in him while he temporarily can't/won't swallow. With squirrels, usually something unexpected happening will snap them out of it. I had one that did it every feeding, and I would pull the nipple out of his mouth and tap him on the top of the head with it.
I have NEVER heard of this behavior in a mouse or anything else for that matter! So until your post, I thought this was a squirrel-specific thing. I wonder if other rodents do it?
You want "rat and mouse" food, not any other rodent. They have a completely different diet than guinea pigs, bunnies, hamsters, etc. And you do not want something that consists of a bunch of different seeds and corn. That is stuff they LIKE, NOT stuff that is healthy for them. If you find some things you can get your hands on, post the name, or a link to the site here on your thread and someone will weigh in as to good or bad.
They are ridiculously cute, aren't they?