Guinea pigs

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This page is to explore the advantages and disadvantages of breeding guinea pigs as a source of meat, as is common practice in Andean countries.

According to this, one male is needed per twelve females. Each female can produce 10-15 young a year. That means one male and twelve females for a yield of 120-180 guinea pigs a year. They can be eaten at age 3-4 months. Big ones can be a little over 1kg. There was a concerted effort in the 1990s to develop bigger meatier varieties [1]

This guide says, "one pair of cavies could produce about 260 new pairs in 2 years". This says, "Most Andean households kept at least 20 cuys; at that level, using a balanced feeding system, Andean families could produce at least 12 pounds of meat per month without decreasing their flock" (that's about equal to one meal of meat a day).

They eat foliage, long grasses, vegetable peels. A varied diet with lots of vitamin C is best

Bedding of straw, replaced weekly.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guinea_pig#As_food