About Us
We started TinyFrolic because we couldn’t find one honest, detailed, up-to-date place to learn how to keep a hamster well. So we built it.
TinyFrolic is a free hamster care website written by people who have kept, loved, and lost hamsters — and who know that a small animal’s life is not a small thing. Every article on this site exists because we wished it existed when we were starting out.
Our story
How a frustrated hamster owner became a website
It started with a Syrian hamster named Peanut and a cage that was, it turned out, far too small. Like most first-time owners, we’d followed the advice on the box — the advice that came with the cage. It took weeks of reading, cross-referencing, and asking questions in obscure forums to understand what Peanut actually needed.
The information existed, but it was buried. The good guidance was scattered across veterinary PDFs, German hamster keeper communities, and Reddit threads from 2015. The bad guidance — outdated, species-agnostic, and sometimes actively harmful — was on every pet store website and in every beginner guide published before about 2020.
TinyFrolic was built to fix that gap. We wanted one place where hamster care information was current, species-specific, honest about what we don’t know, and written for people who genuinely want to do right by their animal — not just keep it alive.
We’ve kept writing ever since. Every article is written or reviewed by someone who has hands-on experience with the species it covers. Every care claim is cross-referenced against current husbandry research. And every time we find out we were wrong about something, we update the article and say so.
How TinyFrolic grew
What we cover
Every stage of hamster life, in detail
TinyFrolic covers hamster care from day one through old age, for every commonly kept species. We don’t do general — every guide specifies which species it applies to and why.
Cage setup & bedding
Size, substrate depth, ventilation, temperature — what actually matters and why cage sizes on packaging are wrong.
Diet & nutrition
Seed mixes, fresh foods, protein sources, and the foods that are quietly toxic to small animals.
Health & vet care
Common illnesses, symptoms to watch for, finding an exotic vet, and when home care is not enough.
Enrichment & behaviour
Wheels, tunnels, foraging, taming, and why boredom is a welfare issue — not just an inconvenience.
Breed & species guides
Syrian, Campbell’s, Winter White, Roborovski, and Chinese hamsters each have genuinely different needs.
Ageing & end of life
Recognising age-related changes, comfort care for elderly hamsters, and the hardest part of keeping small animals.
How we work
The editorial standards we hold ourselves to
Anyone can publish hamster care content. We care about what makes ours worth reading.
Species-specific, always
We never publish “hamster care” advice that treats all hamsters as the same animal. A Syrian’s needs are not a Roborovski’s needs. Every guide specifies which species it applies to and highlights where care differs.
Current, not just common
We cross-reference with current husbandry research, European hamster keeper standards, and exotic vet guidance — not just what’s been repeated on pet sites since 2008. When best practice changes, we update.
Honest about limits
We are experienced keepers and careful researchers, not veterinarians. When a question requires professional clinical assessment, we say so clearly and encourage readers to consult a vet.
Open to being wrong
If a reader sends us a correction with better evidence than our article contains, we act on it. We note updates, we credit corrections, and we do not quietly delete things that turned out to be inaccurate.
Free and independent
TinyFrolic is free to read. Some links are affiliate links — disclosed clearly — but they never influence what we recommend. We do not accept payment to endorse products we wouldn’t otherwise mention.
Why hamsters
On taking small lives seriously
“A hamster lives for two or three years. That is not a long time by any measure. But it is the whole of their life — and they experience it fully, including every hour in a cage that is too small, or too bright, or too empty. The fact that a life is short does not make it less real.”
— TinyFrolic, on why we care so much about thisWe know hamsters are often framed as “starter pets” or children’s gifts. We respectfully disagree with that framing. They are complex, curious, territorial animals with specific physical and psychological needs. Meeting those needs takes real knowledge — and that knowledge should be freely available to anyone who wants it.
That is what TinyFrolic is for.
TinyFrolic today
A small site with a focused mission
30+
In-depth care articles and guides
5
Hamster species covered in detail
100%
Free to read — no paywalls, ever
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Get in touch
Have a care question, spotted an error in one of our articles, want to share a photo of your hamster, or just want to say hello? We read every message and reply within 1–2 business days.
