ihatedarkroast
Well-known member
1 year goals: 1) Assemble the necessary equipment, tractors, and F1 breeding stock 2) Have 5 litters with 1-2 breeding does and get comfortable with care routines and breeding cycles 4) Try out some rabbit recipes and eat rabbit once a week
2 year goals: 1) Try to sell a few bunnies on Craigslist or to Rural King. 2) Increase freezer meet to 100 lbs a year
3 year goals: 1) 250ish lbs a year in bunny meat in my front porch stand up freezer 2) 5 breeding rabbits--2 male and 3 females 3) A network of buyers so I can sell a couple kits from each litter to offset feed costs 4) Sell some poop
5 year goal: 1)Find a way to use or sell batches of hides. 2) Add a second breed like Silver Fox or Chinchilla
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I'm kinda figuring with 2 does and 1 buck, 6-8 kindles a year, I'll be spending $65 on pellets every 12 week breeding cycle. Pellets here are $17 for a 50 lb bag. 1 freezer bunny will likely cost me $6.12 at least if there's no waste (yeah right ha). Which is comparable to chicken. If I can drop my per fryer cost down to $3, it would be really nice.
I haven't figured in cost of timothy hay yet, because I'm not sure which hay/how much to use yet. They have a lot of options at the feed store. One time I got a 50 lb bale of orchard/alfalfa mix. We wasted most of it because my toddlers decided to pull it apart and throw it and roll in it. Such a bale is $22 right. But I also might could get square bales of horse hay local and stick them in the shed overwinter. Good local horse hay is usually hard to come by, and it's fesuce. Do rabbits do well on fescue?
I can also supplement some foraged feed and sell some buns to help with costs. I have 6.5 acres to forage on. I have red maple and apple trees right out the back door. I have 4 pastures, but none are fenced. They are basically a pain in the butt for us to mow all summer. I can't lease them to a farmer because they are either too small, too steep, or too boggy to be worth seeding for hay. So dragging tractors around the lawn by the house is probably the way to go. Or putting the bagger on the lawn tractor. But the grass in my pastures is not great quality. I have no idea how the rabbits would do on it. When I offer the some grass, they do seem to like it tho.
If all goes well, might do some 4-H with my kids. They will be old enough in a year or so for that. But I've never tried it before so we'll see.
Am I on the right track more or less? Think I can get my per fryer cost down below $6? Tips for that?
2 year goals: 1) Try to sell a few bunnies on Craigslist or to Rural King. 2) Increase freezer meet to 100 lbs a year
3 year goals: 1) 250ish lbs a year in bunny meat in my front porch stand up freezer 2) 5 breeding rabbits--2 male and 3 females 3) A network of buyers so I can sell a couple kits from each litter to offset feed costs 4) Sell some poop
5 year goal: 1)Find a way to use or sell batches of hides. 2) Add a second breed like Silver Fox or Chinchilla
__________________________________________________________________________
I'm kinda figuring with 2 does and 1 buck, 6-8 kindles a year, I'll be spending $65 on pellets every 12 week breeding cycle. Pellets here are $17 for a 50 lb bag. 1 freezer bunny will likely cost me $6.12 at least if there's no waste (yeah right ha). Which is comparable to chicken. If I can drop my per fryer cost down to $3, it would be really nice.
I haven't figured in cost of timothy hay yet, because I'm not sure which hay/how much to use yet. They have a lot of options at the feed store. One time I got a 50 lb bale of orchard/alfalfa mix. We wasted most of it because my toddlers decided to pull it apart and throw it and roll in it. Such a bale is $22 right. But I also might could get square bales of horse hay local and stick them in the shed overwinter. Good local horse hay is usually hard to come by, and it's fesuce. Do rabbits do well on fescue?
I can also supplement some foraged feed and sell some buns to help with costs. I have 6.5 acres to forage on. I have red maple and apple trees right out the back door. I have 4 pastures, but none are fenced. They are basically a pain in the butt for us to mow all summer. I can't lease them to a farmer because they are either too small, too steep, or too boggy to be worth seeding for hay. So dragging tractors around the lawn by the house is probably the way to go. Or putting the bagger on the lawn tractor. But the grass in my pastures is not great quality. I have no idea how the rabbits would do on it. When I offer the some grass, they do seem to like it tho.
If all goes well, might do some 4-H with my kids. They will be old enough in a year or so for that. But I've never tried it before so we'll see.
Am I on the right track more or less? Think I can get my per fryer cost down below $6? Tips for that?