morrisoncorner
New member
Update on 2 boys in a box..
The double wide has not, of course, arrived. Or rather, it arrived and was not what I'd ordered. It looks like the boys will be in a standard 30x36 floor space with extra height (I have cages built 24" high) for a while longer. When some dominance play started I made a "train" across the back of stools and a bit of cardboard tubing to create an "underground" hiding space and an "above" space, and it seems to be working well. When they get tired of each other one goes up and one goes down. I have food bowls on both levels, and a crock which they shove into the back bottom corner under the stool. Two buns in a box? Much more waste in the pan. Have adjusted the cleaning schedule accordingly.
I let them out to play yesterday, in what I think may be our last decent fall day, and groomed each of them. No (tap wood) spraying on each other and the fiber is in lovely, growing out, condition. Unlike my single buck, who admittedly is 2 months into his growing cycle, vs. about 5 weeks for these two, I don't have matts behind the ears. Could be the unique properties of each rabbit, of course, but these two do groom each other.. it is possible they're pulling out fibers before they settle into matts.
I am very much hoping this continues to work well. I have decided that in the near term (certainly for 2011) I am not interested in introducing a doe, or getting involved in breeding. While the German Angora is relatively rare, that very rarity, combined with an dogmatic effort to get ever more production out of the animal which dates back to the German breeding programs in WWII, seems to be conspiring to produce an animal with a shortened life expectancy and recessive gene linked defects (I bought two knowing they had juvenile cataracts.. one animal is quite possibly almost blind). I love the breed, but I'd want to be much better informed before I started buying stock specifically for breeding.
So... we're all baching it for now, and I am cautiously optimistic that the experiment with the two younger boys is working well.
The double wide has not, of course, arrived. Or rather, it arrived and was not what I'd ordered. It looks like the boys will be in a standard 30x36 floor space with extra height (I have cages built 24" high) for a while longer. When some dominance play started I made a "train" across the back of stools and a bit of cardboard tubing to create an "underground" hiding space and an "above" space, and it seems to be working well. When they get tired of each other one goes up and one goes down. I have food bowls on both levels, and a crock which they shove into the back bottom corner under the stool. Two buns in a box? Much more waste in the pan. Have adjusted the cleaning schedule accordingly.
I let them out to play yesterday, in what I think may be our last decent fall day, and groomed each of them. No (tap wood) spraying on each other and the fiber is in lovely, growing out, condition. Unlike my single buck, who admittedly is 2 months into his growing cycle, vs. about 5 weeks for these two, I don't have matts behind the ears. Could be the unique properties of each rabbit, of course, but these two do groom each other.. it is possible they're pulling out fibers before they settle into matts.
I am very much hoping this continues to work well. I have decided that in the near term (certainly for 2011) I am not interested in introducing a doe, or getting involved in breeding. While the German Angora is relatively rare, that very rarity, combined with an dogmatic effort to get ever more production out of the animal which dates back to the German breeding programs in WWII, seems to be conspiring to produce an animal with a shortened life expectancy and recessive gene linked defects (I bought two knowing they had juvenile cataracts.. one animal is quite possibly almost blind). I love the breed, but I'd want to be much better informed before I started buying stock specifically for breeding.
So... we're all baching it for now, and I am cautiously optimistic that the experiment with the two younger boys is working well.