I've been asking for help about Alna's litter of 11. We culled the weakest kit a couple days ago. Yesterday we tried separating the kits 5 each in 2 nest boxes, put the smaller lot out for the morning feed. They looked not totally empty but not very full so at midday we tried mixing up formula from our goat's milk and attempted to feed those smaller kits. Got a very little into them. In the evening we put out the second nest box and when it came in 4 kits were very well fed and one unfed and weak--culled that one. This morning we put the box with the 5 smaller kits out, all alive and wiggling when we took them out. Noticed that Alna had finally eaten her grain and drunk moree water than the past few days. Saw Alna get in the box as we left the shed. Went back for the box an hour later and when we checked found all 5 kits dead. Their necks looked odd and we wondered if the doe had killed them all. My apologies for sending such an un-cute photo but we hoped someone with more experience could tell us if these looked like kits killed by the doe.
It wasn't a very pleasant breakfast conversation but we remembered that Alna's first litter that was born in the cold of March died mysteriously when several days old. Now we're worried about putting the remaining 4 live and thriving kits back in for her to feed tonight. We wondered if the smaller kits would have smelled funny to her from being fed the formula. Why would she feed them for several days and then just do them all in? What other explanation is there for them all being dead and their necks looking like that.
Sorry for such a gloomy post on a fine spring morning. There is no joy in Mudville--dead kits and a forecast for snow for the next few days
It wasn't a very pleasant breakfast conversation but we remembered that Alna's first litter that was born in the cold of March died mysteriously when several days old. Now we're worried about putting the remaining 4 live and thriving kits back in for her to feed tonight. We wondered if the smaller kits would have smelled funny to her from being fed the formula. Why would she feed them for several days and then just do them all in? What other explanation is there for them all being dead and their necks looking like that.
Sorry for such a gloomy post on a fine spring morning. There is no joy in Mudville--dead kits and a forecast for snow for the next few days