AlbinoGiant
Well-known member
So it happened a second time...
I found a new hay supplier and the first bale I bought was perfect and of very good quality. My rabbits really enjoyed it. I was starting to run low on hay so I bought another bale except I noticed something a little off about this bale. The bale looked musky and the outside was straw like in appearance. I thought maybe some straw had been mixed in but it only showed on the outside.
I cut open the bale when I got home and I didn't think to much of it and fed it to my rabbits. Two days later the rabbits got sick and became dehydrated drinking lots of water and were sitting hunched in a corner not wanting to move much. I removed all the hay and they started improving, after I gave them some activated charcoal they sprang back into life shortly afterwards and started to behaive like bunnies again. I am feeding them on rabbit food mix, the rabbits appear to be fine now.
Just to confirm it was the hay "second time its happened to me" I put one rabbit in another pen and fed that separately on the suspected bad hay and it become ill.
Upon further inspection of the bale its very dusty and I can see what looks like mold on some hay strands but also the bale looks musky like its got wet at some point and dried and probably last summers hay.
I don't think the hay has been stored correctly so now that this is the second time that this has happened I really don't trust buying hay bales anymore. I think I will try my luck on pet store hay even though its probably less nutritional, but its better than the rabbits dying from organ failure from bad hay.
Bad hay can kill rabbits in a matter of days. A lot of the time people have no idea what they are giving to there rabbit and then once it dies they have no clue why it suddenly got sick and died. Its not always easy to spot a bad bale because even the slightest thing wrong with the hay can kill a rabbit. It also kills horses. Rabbits need hay as part of their main diet.
This is what happens... rabbits eat bad hay, they then start drinking a lot of water and then urinating a lot which is clear urine like they have a problem with the filtration of there kidneys, shortly after they become very poorly and then will stop eating and go into GI Stasis, then death.
As this is the second time I saw the signs early and removed the hay. I'm currently feeding them on pet store hay which seems to be ok.
I found a new hay supplier and the first bale I bought was perfect and of very good quality. My rabbits really enjoyed it. I was starting to run low on hay so I bought another bale except I noticed something a little off about this bale. The bale looked musky and the outside was straw like in appearance. I thought maybe some straw had been mixed in but it only showed on the outside.
I cut open the bale when I got home and I didn't think to much of it and fed it to my rabbits. Two days later the rabbits got sick and became dehydrated drinking lots of water and were sitting hunched in a corner not wanting to move much. I removed all the hay and they started improving, after I gave them some activated charcoal they sprang back into life shortly afterwards and started to behaive like bunnies again. I am feeding them on rabbit food mix, the rabbits appear to be fine now.
Just to confirm it was the hay "second time its happened to me" I put one rabbit in another pen and fed that separately on the suspected bad hay and it become ill.
Upon further inspection of the bale its very dusty and I can see what looks like mold on some hay strands but also the bale looks musky like its got wet at some point and dried and probably last summers hay.
I don't think the hay has been stored correctly so now that this is the second time that this has happened I really don't trust buying hay bales anymore. I think I will try my luck on pet store hay even though its probably less nutritional, but its better than the rabbits dying from organ failure from bad hay.
Bad hay can kill rabbits in a matter of days. A lot of the time people have no idea what they are giving to there rabbit and then once it dies they have no clue why it suddenly got sick and died. Its not always easy to spot a bad bale because even the slightest thing wrong with the hay can kill a rabbit. It also kills horses. Rabbits need hay as part of their main diet.
This is what happens... rabbits eat bad hay, they then start drinking a lot of water and then urinating a lot which is clear urine like they have a problem with the filtration of there kidneys, shortly after they become very poorly and then will stop eating and go into GI Stasis, then death.
As this is the second time I saw the signs early and removed the hay. I'm currently feeding them on pet store hay which seems to be ok.
Last edited: