Water bottles in winter

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ellie ember

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I hope I'm posting this to the right part of the forum-- it's my first post šŸ™ƒ
It's starting to get below freezing where I live and I keep my rabbits outside. Heated water bottles are now $40 a bottle! I can't afford that. Does anyone have a cheaper solution that works well for them?
 
I hope I'm posting this to the right part of the forum-- it's my first post šŸ™ƒ
It's starting to get below freezing where I live and I keep my rabbits outside. Heated water bottles are now $40 a bottle! I can't afford that. Does anyone have a cheaper solution that works well for them?
I shift from bottles to crocks when it starts freezing. We try to have 2x the number of crocks as cages, so it is easy to just switch them out once or twice a day. I take the clean warm bowls out and fill them with warm water, and take the frozen bowls up to house to thaw slowly. (Sometimes if you fill cold crocks with hot water they'll crack.) With crocks, when the water freezes in between changes, the rabbits can and do still lick the ice, so they aren't completely without water.

To really keep rabbits well-hydrated in the winter, in addition to bowls of warm water once or twice a day, we give them an ice block to chew on. It really seems to help the rabbits stay in good condition. We freeze water in old yogurt/cottage cheese tubs, often adding a little bit of something tempting like apple cores, carrot shavings, or sweet potato peelings frozen into the middle. We leave these blocks in the cages all the time, and the rabbits love to play with them and chew on them - they get hydrated, entertained, and good tooth-trimming round-the-clock. The rabbits love them.

Years ago, due to a miscommunication with a housesitter, our rabbits lived for a week with only the ice blocks. I wouldn't do it on purpose, but when we got home, they were none the worse for wear.

Some have expressed concern that like humans, rabbits might get cold from eating snow and/or ice. But unlike humans, rabbits are totally cold-adapted. In fact, our rabbits suffer far more from heat than they ever do from cold. Wild and feral rabbits live on ice and snow for many months of the year in our area. There is no liquid water anywhere when it's below zero, in the single digits, or in the low teens (Fahrenheit), but they don't seem to have any difficulty. We do give our rabbits liquid water at least once a day, but I like the ice blocks because they ensure there's a source of water in case the liquid isn't available for one reason or another (e.g. dumped, drunk, fouled or frozen almost immediately when it's really cold). Actually, my rabbits' favorite is snow - they love that, and strangely (to me, anyway), they will sometimes eat snow before they even drink warm water. But it doesn't last like an ice block because they play with it/in it as well as eat it. :)

There's a fairly long thread (where I posted a lot of the above) with other solutions here:
https://rabbittalk.com/threads/keeping-them-hydrated-during-the-frozen-months.23374/#post-359056
 
I use crocks. I thaw them out in the morning (hot water in a bucket) put in warmish water for them about 3/4 full. Then in the evening I top them up to full. (that rabbits usually have them 1/2 to completely empty then). I buy the cheap 1 cup size ceramic/stone wear bowls at thrift stores. if one breaks... big yip! and they don't chew on them like EVERYTHING else I have tried. and the water stays liquid longer and rabbits can chew or lick ice if it freezes. Works well with the guinea pigs as well.
 
On snow before warm water : some animals know that warm(er) water may be bad, so they'll pick the colder/coldest source they can find. Horses have that tendency too. With only one option they are happy to drink it, with choice not so much. Some of it makes sense, some is just animal logic.
 
I use stainless steel crocks for dogs, with an electric heating element (siliconized 12V/10W heating pad from Ebay) under it, hooked up to an adjustable power supply, I run it on appr. 6-9V.

Removing the ice from the crocks always was the worst inconvinience for me, well worth putting some effort into this setup.

I also use these pads under a corner of nest boxes in cold weather.
 
I use stainless steel crocks for dogs,
It doesn't freeze here often but I keep some small stainless steel bowls in case it does. It's easy to bash the ice out of them. In the past when we've had snow on the ground and freezing temperatures for days, I've made a warm mash for the rabbits in order to get some moisture into them - soaked pellets, linseed, flaked barley, bran, flaked peas, porridge oats, anything I have really. Also carrots help too.
 

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