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maggie_j_gw

Update on my natural feeding program for rabbits

Maggie_J
16 years ago

As many of you know, this spring I began the transition from feeding pellets plus natural foods to an all-natural diet. I have a small rabbitry, just a trio of breeders at the moment and their 14 kits just over a month old. Prior to breeding, with all the lush spring greens to choose from, gathering for the rabbits was quick and easy.

They were happy with greens - mainly weeds - and grass hay and looked great. They still had pellets available, but seldom showed much interest in them. They were eating perhaps a quarter as much of the pelleted food as before.

We were very late breeding the rabbits. Somehow it did not get done until early July. In early August, the does kindled litters of nine and seven, with one early death in each litter. When the kits were born, the does were suddenly very ravenous, which is normal, but were no longer satisfied with their greens and hay. They took to chowing down all the pellets as well. I increased the ration of greens and hay but they ate everything in sight and still wanted more.

They did not like the whole oats I tried to feed them (the quality did not look great), so I took the rolled oats from my kitchen - the large flake type. I have always used these to start the babies off on solid food, but this time I was feeding it for the benefit of the does. This worked well, except for the cost. (We have been without a vehicle on and off lately... so I couldn't get to the feed store.)

We had a prolonged dry spell along about that time and it became increasingly difficult to find nice greens for the rabbits. (Note to self to dry and save some spring greens for such times.) I don't know what we would have done without round-leafed mallow. (Malva rotundifolia or Malva neglecta) This useful plant grows just about everywhere around here, starting with a central rosette and sending out runners that form rosettes all along their length until the plants form a thick ground cover that lets very little else get a foothold. The mallow held up remarkably well during the dry spell and there is no end to the rabbit's enjoyment of it, no matter how often they are given it. It is also a very safe green.

These kits had greens and rolled oats in their nest boxes as soon as their eyes were open. I chose the very safest of greens for them: raspberry leaves and plantain. I also used grass hay for nesting material so they could nibble on that as well. At two weeks they were out of the nest box and nibbling greens alongside momma... although at that stage they were more interested in squeezing under momma for an extra snack of milk. I don't think there is any young critter sight more amusing than seeing those little hind legs waving in the air while they suckle.

This week, re-reading Ann Kanable's excellent book, Raising Rabbits, I came across her recommendation that on a pellet-less diet, rabbits do best on a mix of grains along with their greens and hay. So I tried them on a good quality scratch. They took kindly to it...except that they usually don't eat all of the cracked corn. If it builds up in the feeder, I toss it to the chickens.

This was very good timing because I was down to the last scrapings of the pellets. That last bag was opened in late May/early June, I think...I thought I'd never get to the end of it and I was also determined that it would be the last bag. So we are now officially "pellet-free" and that's where the project sits at the moment. All fourteen kits are doing well, lively and healthy. There are two runts in the larger litter but they are making good progress since they started eating solid food. The kits in the smaller litter of six are much bigger than the ones in the litter of eight... which makes me think that more is sometimes less. I haven't weighed them yet but I really should in order to establish a benchmark for future litters.

We've had some good rain at last. That should really help the greens to make a comeback. Everything has been drying off badly and even the mallow is getting scruffy.

I will be very interested to see if the meat from these fryers tastes different from pellet-raised fryers. These, of course, did get nibbles of pellets from time to time before I sorted out the grain situation, but at least 95% of their solid food has been greens, grains and hay. There have been absolutely NO PROBLEMS with the youngsters digestion of copious greens. I speculate that this may be because having had them from the beginning, their guts developed the right flora to digest them.

I'll update again down the road a little. Comments, questions, and suggestions are all appreciated.

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