I realize I am fortunate to have access to good cheap alfalfa hay. Just want to clarify that these are the small square bales, about 40 pounds each. Still, it makes the natural feeding very easy.
Big Tom":2ynwq1fx said:So I spent an entire evening reading this thread, has anybody been successfully feeding nothing but sprouts and hay? What kind of gains are you seeing? Any problems?
wormrun":188xoays said:Big Tom":188xoays said:Wormrun, I know you've only been feeding fodder for 6 weeks, but have you noticed a difference in weight gains in your kits compared to pellets? How is over all herd health?
OK, I weighed the 9 babies. 71 oz. total. The 4 blacks weighed 34 oz. The 5 whites weighed 36 oz. They are 16 days old. I guess that will give us a good idea how they are doing going forward. Just a quick recap, Momma is FG/NZB bred to CA buck. Keep me posted so I have a comparison.
My other young rabbits are between 4 months and 5 months of age. They are growing very well, but since I'm new I have no comparison. I feed fodder first thing in the morning, then I fill waters, tend to fodder, offer hay. They always have a little pellets in their container. I fill these once a week with a 1/2 cup to 1 cup each. I know, seems odd. There are two that are stubborn. One loves her pellets and the other loves her hay. I have no idea how much to give them when they are grown up enough to breed. HELP!
Here's two articles for your reading pleasure that have comforted me in my endeavor to explore fodder vs just pellets. The first is called "Rabbits, Rabbits Everywhere" and the other is on chicken comparisons, "The Broiler Challenge."
http://hydroponics.com.au/free-articles/issue114-rabbits-rabbits-everywhere-rabbits
http://lifeatmennageriefarm.blogspot.com/search/label/basic broiler challenge
Thanks!
__________ Mon Apr 29, 2013 8:38 pm __________
mystang89":188xoays said:Toady":188xoays said:Finally I'm having some success with a mini fodder system. I put some holes in one side of a plastic takeout container and put some seeds in (wheat, oats and orchard grass) after soaking them overnight and about 5 days in the shoots are a few inches high. I really need to see if somewhere around here sells barley or stick with the wheat.
Good luck finding Barley. Wheat has worked well for me so even if I found some it would probably be more expensive so I'll stick with the wheat.
MaggieJ":188xoays said:Just to clarify, I find that fryers on natural feed grow more slowly than fryers raised on pellets. Mine take 14-16 weeks as opposed to 10-12 weeks. Mine get alfalfa hay free choice, some grass hay, and wheat sprouts/fodder. I do not feed additional grain when they have the sprouted grain. A few more days and the weeds will be far enough advanced to make gathering worthwhile. Gathered greens make up most of their summer diet. They also have a trace mineral salt block.
I have to grow them out for longer, but overall feed costs are much lower than with pellets so my cost per pound is about half what it was when I was feeding pellets. I like the flavour of the meat better too.
Thanks
Well hi there MaggieJ, I am super happy to know you've been down the road of natural feeding, etc. I do plan on growing some other things for them this summer, but for now, they appear to be quite happy with the sprouted grains. The wheat and the barley is the easiest to deal with, the Triticale is just a tad more money. The oats, well, I just started them and I have tails along with extreme temperatures. We'll see if it grew mold. Thanks
SarahMelisse":188xoays said:Big Tom":188xoays said:So I spent an entire evening reading this thread, has anybody been successfully feeding nothing but sprouts and hay? What kind of gains are you seeing? Any problems?
I am. So far I have noticed an improvement in coats (I have French angoras) and an increase in litter size. I am feeding 6% of their body weight in 8-day sprouted barley fodder, 1/4 cup black oil sunflower seeds, and free choice orchard grass hay daily. No pellets. I have my whole setup on my website (link below) and what I'm doing. Good luck!
They may be mono-gastric, but they have a method of compensation which is nearly unique to lagomorphs. Their food passes completely through their system once, and partially breaks down and ferments. They pass nutrient-rich cecotropes, special feces which they reingest directly from the anus. This passes through the digestive system a second time, in a process not unlike chewing cud. The rabbit is able to absorb the nutrients from the cecotropes. The waste from this second process goes on to form the normal, spherical feces we often call "bunny berries" here.Bigredfeather":293pyqe9 said:Finally, I read a few pages back someone asking about at what stage of fodder growth to feed to rabbits. This is where I have a rabbit digestion question. Do rabbits have a digestive system that is equipped to break down plant material better than most mono-gastric species? I know my goat can digest it completely due to having a chambered digestive system. I feed them fodder that is at 8 days growth, but I feed my pigs and chickens fodder that is at 4-5 days so they can get the most out of it.
wormrun":ghn60lb3 said:I have not done away with the pellets completely. Did all of yours start eating the fodder right away and take out the pellets in one day or did you taper them off? I have one that won't touch it. I suppose I could do tough love and start reducing the pellets. Tell me how you did it. Currently I have 3 1/2 bags of pellets to go through. After that I may never buy them again.
I watched your videos and I saw your article in Mother Earth News BTW, congratulations! Keep posting on the progress of your herd during the fodder switch. I myself have been raising 9 babies since I started and have been tracking the gains. Mom is NSBxFG Dad is CA. I purchased her pregnant. At 16 days the kits weighed 71 oz. (combined all bunnies) and 8 days later, (now 24 days old) when they started eating some solids they gained another 41 oz. Now the combined weight is 112 oz. I will be interested in the next weigh in as they are eating more and more each day. I will also start removing the pellets to get them onto the fodder exclusively. They don't eat a lot of the pellets but they eat about 1 to 1.5 cups a day (combined with mom).
mystang89":pb7qwyix said:With the temp from outside increasing I've noticed mold starting to increase as well so I've had to start thinking of a new way for the trays to drain better.
she also sells the plans for the system for $20....
ApplegateRanch":17erwcj4 said:she also sells the plans for the system for $20....
Her plan price has now jumped to $29.
I recently bought 56 pounds (a 1 bushel sack) of winter rye seed for $27 at our "local" grain elevator, and have about 10-12 pounds left after planting a plot. Some of that which could be used for sprouting/foddering, but I have only seen wheat, barley, and oats mentioned. Is the rye safe for them when sprouted?
We also raised sunflowers and corn this year for seed & grain for the chickens. Fortunately, those stalks haven't been tilled under yet, so from other posts, those are a useful rabbit feed?
Currently I have a senor buck & doe, and a junior doe, all American chinchilla, that we raise for meat. Our town's feed store went out of business, so now it is 50 miles round trip, minimum for high priced pellets; or 120 miles round trip 'to the big city' when we have major shopping to do, for lower prices that come with storage issues.
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