Olimpia
Well-known member
I hope y'all like to learn about my weird issues with my rabbits I keep having..
So, Chardonnay, Belgian hare, 1 year 4 months about. Aug 8th marked day 28 of pregnancy (though I usually have babies day 30-31).
Monday/Tuesday she spent most of her time laying down stretch out completely. Heaving breathing, sounded a bit congested even. Dirty bum.
Wednesday she had started to drool all over herself. I took her inside. Her temperature was 42C (over 40.5C is an emergency. usually body temperature lowers before birth). She would run around frantically, falling over a lot. Then stretch out again with butt sticking upwards.
An hour into this when I was sure this wasn't just a regular overheating issue, we took her to the vet.
The kits were still far up in the stomach and not in position to be born. Despite this I was urging that something was not right with her. She got calcium by mouth and an oxytocin injection. We put her somewhere dark and she passed six kits.
At first I thought they were under-developed. But they are I guess "trademark DOA kits" in their appearance. Apparently dying in the womb makes their bodies swell and they look like this, and feel gross to the touch. But she did clean them off well, poor thing.
We're pretty sure she would have died if we didn't induce her labour to get these out. They might have been toxic to her.
Now we're okay from the vet to rebreed her again but I want to change my regime. The hares I think are a bit too delicate to just feed the normal 16% ration that I do for my other rabbits. He thinks maybe we should do something different.
So these are my ideas.. that I'll go over with the vet..
-Supplement calf manna (maybe start 1 week before due date?)
-alfalfa cube supplement (again, start last week of pregnancy)
I know a lot of people worry about too much calcium, but if it's just for the pregnancy/kit rearing it shouldn't cause a problem I wouldn't think. In order to give birth a rabbit needs to release calcium into the blood stream from the bones. This is controlled by hormones, and it's possible her hormones were poorly balanced. So a solution to that would be to add more calcium in the diet.. I THINK... no one else seems to agree with me on this :lol:
So, Chardonnay, Belgian hare, 1 year 4 months about. Aug 8th marked day 28 of pregnancy (though I usually have babies day 30-31).
Monday/Tuesday she spent most of her time laying down stretch out completely. Heaving breathing, sounded a bit congested even. Dirty bum.
Wednesday she had started to drool all over herself. I took her inside. Her temperature was 42C (over 40.5C is an emergency. usually body temperature lowers before birth). She would run around frantically, falling over a lot. Then stretch out again with butt sticking upwards.
An hour into this when I was sure this wasn't just a regular overheating issue, we took her to the vet.
The kits were still far up in the stomach and not in position to be born. Despite this I was urging that something was not right with her. She got calcium by mouth and an oxytocin injection. We put her somewhere dark and she passed six kits.
At first I thought they were under-developed. But they are I guess "trademark DOA kits" in their appearance. Apparently dying in the womb makes their bodies swell and they look like this, and feel gross to the touch. But she did clean them off well, poor thing.
We're pretty sure she would have died if we didn't induce her labour to get these out. They might have been toxic to her.
Now we're okay from the vet to rebreed her again but I want to change my regime. The hares I think are a bit too delicate to just feed the normal 16% ration that I do for my other rabbits. He thinks maybe we should do something different.
So these are my ideas.. that I'll go over with the vet..
-Supplement calf manna (maybe start 1 week before due date?)
-alfalfa cube supplement (again, start last week of pregnancy)
I know a lot of people worry about too much calcium, but if it's just for the pregnancy/kit rearing it shouldn't cause a problem I wouldn't think. In order to give birth a rabbit needs to release calcium into the blood stream from the bones. This is controlled by hormones, and it's possible her hormones were poorly balanced. So a solution to that would be to add more calcium in the diet.. I THINK... no one else seems to agree with me on this :lol: