OrovilleTim
Member
Ok, we've decided to raise meat rabbits for the purpose of supplementing our family's food (well, replacing a portion of questionable protein in our diet with healthy protein.) I supplemented many a family meal as a teen with wild rabbits and am looking forward to introducing my wife and kids to rabbit meat. A bonus will also be the manure that will supplement the established compost routine we have for our small container based garden (and will eventually help enrich our clay soil for a in-ground row garden.)
Anyway, following is our plan which I've come to after reading probably too much stuff. I'd love to hear input from others to make sure I don't have any wrong assumptions. I know there are details that need to be flushed out as things go along, but the housing is where I will be starting and wanted to save any future headaches from doing it wrong now.
I am making a slanted roof rabbit shed based on the plans in the newest Bob Bennett (page 68/69.) It's basically a 3 sided shed that I'll put some mil-surp canvas over the front that can be rolled up/down as weather changes (although it is relatively mild here in CA.) The framing to hang the cages will be made out of angle iron. The footprint would be 4'x10' which would fit in our limited space area.
Here is where the biggest question is as it's the largest expenditure will be: Will six cages be enough for a single family meat herd, and are my cage sizes realistic?
The rabbits in question will most likely be (4) New Zealand Whites (one bred before purchase senior doe, one young doe, two young bucks.) Based on these rabbits, I was looking at (4) 24"x30" cages and (2) 24"x24" cages (all 18" tall.) These would be (2) 24"x30" for the does, (2) 24"x24" for the bucks, and (2) 24"x30" for the weaned offspring.
Is this a correct plan or do you see potential issues? I can't help but think that the (2) offspring cages might be short-sighted / small even though the plan is to use these offspring as food. I've read so many things such as needing to separate the bucks, but on the other hand I've heard you can leave the offspring together up to 12 weeks with no issues. I've also read that it is recommended to have other cages available for potential breeding stock, but I've also read that you just replace your "main" bunnies with offspring when the time comes.
Thanks in advance for the valuable insight. Money and time is tight and mistakes can be expensive in both.
Anyway, following is our plan which I've come to after reading probably too much stuff. I'd love to hear input from others to make sure I don't have any wrong assumptions. I know there are details that need to be flushed out as things go along, but the housing is where I will be starting and wanted to save any future headaches from doing it wrong now.
I am making a slanted roof rabbit shed based on the plans in the newest Bob Bennett (page 68/69.) It's basically a 3 sided shed that I'll put some mil-surp canvas over the front that can be rolled up/down as weather changes (although it is relatively mild here in CA.) The framing to hang the cages will be made out of angle iron. The footprint would be 4'x10' which would fit in our limited space area.
Here is where the biggest question is as it's the largest expenditure will be: Will six cages be enough for a single family meat herd, and are my cage sizes realistic?
The rabbits in question will most likely be (4) New Zealand Whites (one bred before purchase senior doe, one young doe, two young bucks.) Based on these rabbits, I was looking at (4) 24"x30" cages and (2) 24"x24" cages (all 18" tall.) These would be (2) 24"x30" for the does, (2) 24"x24" for the bucks, and (2) 24"x30" for the weaned offspring.
Is this a correct plan or do you see potential issues? I can't help but think that the (2) offspring cages might be short-sighted / small even though the plan is to use these offspring as food. I've read so many things such as needing to separate the bucks, but on the other hand I've heard you can leave the offspring together up to 12 weeks with no issues. I've also read that it is recommended to have other cages available for potential breeding stock, but I've also read that you just replace your "main" bunnies with offspring when the time comes.
Thanks in advance for the valuable insight. Money and time is tight and mistakes can be expensive in both.