ThunderHill
Well-known member
Hi! I currently have all-wire cages hanging from the rafters inside a metal pole barn, with a deep litter pile underneath. It's not optimal for us due to the strain on the barn, the mess, and that I'm not really able to remove the cages easily. We have 10 total holes, some 24x24 and some 24x36, hanging back to back in the center of a 12x12 area (old horse stall) and New Zealand rabbits.
I'm planning to move to a system of stacked cages attached to simple wooden frames, with dropping pans for each cage. We would have 6 frames with 2 cages each, for a total of 12 holes, all 24x36. The 12x12 space would have three frames on opposite sides, with plenty of space in the middle for a cart to centrally dump pans, a table for weighing, etc., and feed. We're also adding quail cages in the same format (different section of the barn) but 3 high, and have seen numerous sources online recommending the oil drip pans for their droppings. I'm posting this to see if anyone has used these for rabbits, and if so, how often you have to dump them and any other feedback or advice you might have. (I've read through all the old threads I could find about drip pans, and found lots of great info on absorbent materials to use, fly control, etc., but nothing specifically on oil drip pans.) They seem a bit shallow and flimsy, but an initial test with a large doe in this set up seems to be going fine. After 4 days I only needed to scrape out one corner and it could have probably gone a whole week. There hasn't really been much smell as there is good ventilation. I've also looked at those cement mixing pans, but they are much heavier and bulky, so I might use those under the bottom cages and put does with kits and growouts on the bottom, then use the lighter oil pans under the top row for single-rabbit cages producing less waste. Any thoughts? Is this a terrible idea that I'll regret later?? Several of my cages are needing floors replaced anyway, so either way I'll be doing some building. This picture is what I'm planning (currently has two quail and one rabbit, but I'd have them as two rabbits and then three quail.) Most of this design is an idea we got from a YouTube site called Coturnix Corner. Thanks in advance for any input!
I'm planning to move to a system of stacked cages attached to simple wooden frames, with dropping pans for each cage. We would have 6 frames with 2 cages each, for a total of 12 holes, all 24x36. The 12x12 space would have three frames on opposite sides, with plenty of space in the middle for a cart to centrally dump pans, a table for weighing, etc., and feed. We're also adding quail cages in the same format (different section of the barn) but 3 high, and have seen numerous sources online recommending the oil drip pans for their droppings. I'm posting this to see if anyone has used these for rabbits, and if so, how often you have to dump them and any other feedback or advice you might have. (I've read through all the old threads I could find about drip pans, and found lots of great info on absorbent materials to use, fly control, etc., but nothing specifically on oil drip pans.) They seem a bit shallow and flimsy, but an initial test with a large doe in this set up seems to be going fine. After 4 days I only needed to scrape out one corner and it could have probably gone a whole week. There hasn't really been much smell as there is good ventilation. I've also looked at those cement mixing pans, but they are much heavier and bulky, so I might use those under the bottom cages and put does with kits and growouts on the bottom, then use the lighter oil pans under the top row for single-rabbit cages producing less waste. Any thoughts? Is this a terrible idea that I'll regret later?? Several of my cages are needing floors replaced anyway, so either way I'll be doing some building. This picture is what I'm planning (currently has two quail and one rabbit, but I'd have them as two rabbits and then three quail.) Most of this design is an idea we got from a YouTube site called Coturnix Corner. Thanks in advance for any input!