We just dropped two oak trees into the front yard. I know my buns will eat some of the leaves when I turn them out. Is that OK?
that's interesting since I was going to put corrid in her water today. She is bony feeling and not eating alot. She is 7.8 lbs but has had the wobbles for quite a while and rests alot. OK I will lay off the oak.Very high in tannin (tannic acid). This will almost certainly cause digestive upset in some rabbits. But a couple of leaves every now & then may help to keep internal parasites at bay such as coccidia.
Wild European rabbits will eat bark and dead leaves, especially in winter when there's not much else around. But they know how much is safe to eat - domestics probably wouldn't.that's interesting since I was going to put corrid in her water today. She is bony feeling and not eating alot. She is 7.8 lbs but has had the wobbles for quite a while and rests alot. OK I will lay off the oak.
those are some happy bunnies. I do like letting mine out to graze but it makes me very nervous. One stays close, one ventures but always comes back, one is just learning but is so happy when out. My doe hates her pellets, she wants to graze.Domestics can know what and how much they can stomach - when they had the chance to learn it. Rabbits were domesticated rather recently, the instincts are still there. Mine are free range outside during the day, grow up that way, start to venture outside the hutches at about 6 weeks, and they get forage with everything that grows on the meadow. Also tree leaves and branches.
Stuff like ivy disappeared gradually from my garden, some leafs at a time, and there is other stuff they ignore completly (not much though), they ignore the toxic lists on the internet and don't have issues.
There is a tiny oak sapling just outside my fence that took ten years to grow to knee height, every time a rabbit got out (I let them out on meadow and wood when I'm around, they always come back) it got stripped of it's leafs. Don't think they care about acorns though, imo they don't have the right teeth for nuts so this isn't really part of their diet, don't know if they would need leaching after unshelling them.
Anyway, with rabbits I only care about abundant or continous food sources, they need time to get used to new stuff and if it's not sure if they eat it or not I don't bother exploiting limited short term opportunities.
Enter your email address to join: