This is a specific conversation about Guinea pig supplies — the essentials — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Switching a Baldwin to fleece is a really smart move — hairless guinea pigs lose heat much faster than coated breeds, and paper towel offers almost no insulation. Before I point you to something specific, a couple of quick questions: is your Baldwin housed alone or with a companion, and what size is the enclosure you're lining? Fleece liners are sized to fit, so getting that right matters.
He's with one other guinea pig, a normal coated one. They're in a C&C cage, 2x4 grids.
inparticular.ai
Perfect setup — a 2x4 C&C is a solid size for two pigs. For a Baldwin especially, I'd go with Kavee fleece cage liners. They make them sized precisely for C&C grids, so a 2x4 liner fits your cage exactly with no cutting or fussing. The fleece top layer wicks moisture away from the surface so it stays dry, while the absorbent inner layer does the work. Your Baldwin will be sitting on something genuinely warm and soft rather than crinkled paper towel, which makes a real difference for a hairless pig.
How do I actually use them — do I need anything underneath, or is the liner enough on its own?
inparticular.ai
The Kavee liners are self-contained — there's an absorbent layer built in, so you don't need a separate pee pad underneath for normal use. That said, some owners add a disposable pad under the liner near a favourite toilet corner if their pigs are heavy wetters. For a Baldwin I'd also suggest picking up two liners so you can rotate: one in the cage, one in the wash. Fleece needs washing every 3–4 days to stay hygienic, and having a spare means no scramble on laundry day.
Any tips on washing them so the fleece stays effective?
inparticular.ai
Yes — shake off any hay and droppings before they go in the machine, and wash without fabric softener. Softener clogs the fibres and ruins the wicking, which is the whole point of fleece bedding. A 40-degree wash is fine. Give them a shake when they come out of the machine and line dry or tumble on low. After a few washes the fleece actually performs better, not worse, so they're a long-term investment compared to constantly buying paper towel rolls.
That all makes sense. Where's the best place to get the Kavee liners?
inparticular.ai
Kavee sell directly through their own website and also through Amazon UK — searching 'Kavee fleece liner 2x4' will bring them straight up. Go for the 2x4 size to match your grid count. They're not the cheapest upfront compared to a bag of paper towel, but two liners will last years with proper care, and your Baldwin will genuinely be warmer and more comfortable for it.
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.