WyoWool
Active member
Litter of 5 jersey wooly, born late November.
Of the five, the only self is a gorgeous black doe. The rest are brokens. Nicely marked brokens, too, but the clear winner is the self.
Mom is black otter, Dad is broken Siamese Sable. Both have substantial wins on the show table, however this is the first litter for each. (Dad has had a subsequent litter with another doe, another 5 bunnies with 3 broken and 2 REW from a REW mom and none have mismatched toenails)
The best bunny of the 5, the self black doe......she’s got 3 white toenails on one foot. I can’t keep a DQ, but my bigger worry is if I have a hidden genetic problem on my hands. I have gotten several conflicting comments about this bunny. Every thing from “it’s the Mom, get rid of the mom or you’ll always have this problem” to “She’s genetically a broken with a white spot on black because it’s more than just one toenail, so keep her and breed her because she’s so typey.” It’s not skin or hair that’s white, it’s three toenails on a hind foot.
I have a small rabbitry, and no room for DQs or DQ producers. My spouse already claimed a reject wooly and that’s all the room for pets we have.
Do I get rid of this gorgeous little doe, and potentially her mom to not perpetuate this genetic flaw? Do I keep mom and just hope she doesn’t throw another like it? Never breed these two together again??
Of the five, the only self is a gorgeous black doe. The rest are brokens. Nicely marked brokens, too, but the clear winner is the self.
Mom is black otter, Dad is broken Siamese Sable. Both have substantial wins on the show table, however this is the first litter for each. (Dad has had a subsequent litter with another doe, another 5 bunnies with 3 broken and 2 REW from a REW mom and none have mismatched toenails)
The best bunny of the 5, the self black doe......she’s got 3 white toenails on one foot. I can’t keep a DQ, but my bigger worry is if I have a hidden genetic problem on my hands. I have gotten several conflicting comments about this bunny. Every thing from “it’s the Mom, get rid of the mom or you’ll always have this problem” to “She’s genetically a broken with a white spot on black because it’s more than just one toenail, so keep her and breed her because she’s so typey.” It’s not skin or hair that’s white, it’s three toenails on a hind foot.
I have a small rabbitry, and no room for DQs or DQ producers. My spouse already claimed a reject wooly and that’s all the room for pets we have.
Do I get rid of this gorgeous little doe, and potentially her mom to not perpetuate this genetic flaw? Do I keep mom and just hope she doesn’t throw another like it? Never breed these two together again??