Breed for Both Meat and Fur

Rabbit Talk  Forum

Help Support Rabbit Talk Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I have two lines of Rex right now, both have good feet. One line has mega great fur, very nice indeed and the other has OK fur but has the colors I have hunted so long for, harlequin and tricolor so should be able to mix and match to produce the excellent fur quality with the color AND the good feets.

Having a goal makes breeding more fun somehow. :D

So what M4G said about finding good stock is good advice, ask questions of the breeder and if you don't like something about the rabbits you find, keep looking. Healthy mutts cheap are a better deal than high priced flawed purebred stock.
 
GBov":2j4bu2v2 said:
Sorry to be a bit late to add my two cents worth but if you are totally new to rabbits, get all your equipment and then get the cheapest rabbits you can get your hands on. Go for every color you like the look of, either off Craigslist or a local livestock sale.

Breed them and work with them for a year or two and then step up into pure bloodstock.

Your stress levels will be waaaaay down and it will be more fun for you and once you feel really comfortable with rabbits, get what you really want then.

Even then the learning curve will throw you problems but at least it won't be a straight upward journey, learning on rabbits that cost lots each.

That way you can start NOW instead of in a few years time. Mwahahahaaaaaaa! ;)

Just to follow up on this.

I had decided on Silver Fox, but the local source for that closed up their rabbitry. By the time I could look farther, we were in COVID lockdown.

This was great advice. I now have two NZW does, which I bought pre-bred from a local breeder. He was very helpful, and gave me an excellent price. The does both kindled, four kits each. I'm learning, and yes, it's a lot of fun. My rabbitry has eight cages in two rows, each cage 2'x3'x18". It'll be a while before I process any of them, but the kits are growing fast.

One reason why I said it was great advice was sheltering the animals from the heat. The NZWs clearly have trouble when it gets very hot (predicting 91F today,) and I think Silver Foxes would have been in much worse trouble. I've hung tarps to shade them from the direct sun.

Thank you all for your support.

Doozy Wombat
 
DoozyWombat":1m8qyq2s said:
Great answers all!

Nymphadora (great name!) and MaggieJ, good idea. I am going to my county fair this weekend, and there are three ARBA RCBA shows this Fall that I can fit in my schedule. I'm still a year or two out from getting breeding stock, but I wanted to get ideas directly from online experts before asking questions at a show where people might be very busy.

I'm also aware that I'll need to be cautious in what I say. I've run into a couple of people with very strong opinions about killing fluffy bunnies. Strangely, neither were vegetarians.

Shazza, excellent thoughts on variety in the pelts. You have some beautiful animals in your website gallery page. I haven't read all the way through this forum yet, but I assume there are several threads about where to sell pelts. I'll have to think more on uniformity for larger projects vs. variety for more interesting single pelts and variegated larger projects.

SableSteel, thanks for the comments on the different varieties. You have shown a LOT of different breeds! I'm looking forward to seeing more of what you have learned.

Thanks again to all!

Well, you already have some rabbits, but when speaking to breeders later, it's always best to find out their opinions on the edibility of rabbits before mentioning you want the different colors for pelts. If you're at a rabbit show (they will hopefully happen again at some point) you can always mention you're interested in show rabbits. Note: being interested in show rabbits isn't the same thing as showing rabbits. Then you'd have a reason to ask about various coat colors and such.

Some breeders get whacko about signing a 'non-breeding' contract and other oddball things. Even if they have great stock, it's probably best to leave them alone unless they live far away from you.
 
As Hotcatz says, RUN AWAY FROM CRAZY!!! :lol:

So glad you have rabbits, at last, they are the most fun ever!
 

Latest posts

Back
Top