Ideas for winter water bowls?

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Mine seem to think snow is a treat which is great and readily at hand in the winter.

I had 75° days and 60° nights less then a week ago. Now its 28 and dropping and if the wind shifts could potentially see 12"+ of snow tonight. :rolleyes:
Is it ok for my adult rabbits to play outside if it's windy and cold?
Ya I think it's climate geo-engineering. I saw all that snow coming your way. Lake affect? I guess it could be.
 
If you do a search for winter water, you'll find lots of threads about it. The search feature on this site doesn't seem to get used as much as one might expect, but it's a valuable tool.

My solution was posted in this one.
https://rabbittalk.com/threads/cheap-and-easy-winter-water-idea.18459/
Thank you Maggie. That is an idea that might work well for my growouts!
I tend not to use the search unless I absolutely have to. My browser is not fully compatible with the search on most forums, I need to turn off too many things or open into Chrome to use it.
 
Is it ok for my adult rabbits to play outside if it's windy and cold?
Ya I think it's climate geo-engineering. I saw all that snow coming your way. Lake affect? I guess it could be.
I dont typically see much Lake effect here, the wind needs to blow just right. Thankfully I am no where near Buffalo and their expected 4ft coming in tonight.

Mine rabbits seem to enjoy snow day adventures. As long as its not wet out they will be fine.
 
Fortex expensive? I was getting them from Jeffers for $2-3 ea. Cheaper then anything else.
Ceramics will crack on me. We do get cold enough with wind chill that they will freeze near instantly.
We use the bottles, have extras which we keep in the house and exchange bottles as needed for ice or refill. We check the rolling ball to make sure ones still ok are not sticking.
 
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i"ve resolved to the fact that winter is brutal for watering.

i use these and no longer have flipped or chewed bowls
I'm still on the hunt for a outdoor watering system that wont freeze the lines or nipples here in northern Ohio
 

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Yeah, I sometimes have flipped bowls. I'm in Western West Virginia and I used the black rubber bowls all winter. I don't like the fact that they are rubber and I know it leaches into the water a bit, but I changed the water 2 times a day everyday during use. Since the weather has changed I went back to the bottles which I prefer. For the metal bowls, are you able to get the ice out easily?
 
Is it ok for my adult rabbits to play outside if it's windy and cold?
Ya I think it's climate geo-engineering. I saw all that snow coming your way. Lake affect? I guess it could be.
I think rabbits are the most well equipped animals for snow and cold weather. They don't seem to be bothered by it. They only seem to be bothered if they are wet and it is cold. So I would say as long as it's not a sloppy day, the answer would be, yes!
 
Is it ok for my adult rabbits to play outside if it's windy and cold?
Ya I think it's climate geo-engineering. I saw all that snow coming your way. Lake affect? I guess it could be.
My rabbits have an insulated shelter leading to a windowed shelter (where pellets and water are kept) and free access to a fenced yard with brush piles. Even on those days it dipped to -20* they chose to be out running and nibbling. We got 14" first week kits were coming out. I worried about them getting lost in snow so much deeper than them. Then I saw the buck put his nose down, push with his hind legs like a snow plow. He plowed paths to several brush piles that they hide in and chew on.( Such a happy surprise)I have heated water bottles in shelter yet they often eat snow. My quail have a heated waterer in their aviary yet I noticed they would come peck snow from my boots so I often give them a snow ball they will flock to as a treat. My sister in law shared when she used crocks with her chickens they got frostbite faces and did better when she took the crocks away and just let them eat snow. someone on this forum posted they freeze blocks of ice with treats in them for their caged rabbits as winter water. Ice and snow would be a wild creatures water source in the cold north winters. Rabbits are not only well built for cold, but seem to enjoy it. Especially if you choose breeds carefully. I also think the ability to run and play helps. Think of yourself just sitting in the cold or working and playing...
 
My rabbits have an insulated shelter leading to a windowed shelter (where pellets and water are kept) and free access to a fenced yard with brush piles. Even on those days it dipped to -20* they chose to be out running and nibbling. We got 14" first week kits were coming out. I worried about them getting lost in snow so much deeper than them. Then I saw the buck put his nose down, push with his hind legs like a snow plow. He plowed paths to several brush piles that they hide in and chew on.( Such a happy surprise)I have heated water bottles in shelter yet they often eat snow. My quail have a heated waterer in their aviary yet I noticed they would come peck snow from my boots so I often give them a snow ball they will flock to as a treat. My sister in law shared when she used crocks with her chickens they got frostbite faces and did better when she took the crocks away and just let them eat snow. someone on this forum posted they freeze blocks of ice with treats in them for their caged rabbits as winter water. Ice and snow would be a wild creatures water source in the cold north winters. Rabbits are not only well built for cold, but seem to enjoy it. Especially if you choose breeds carefully. I also think the ability to run and play helps. Think of yourself just sitting in the cold or working and playing...
I use metal bowls and when it's freezing just change them out 3 times a day. Yes my buck and doe go out of their hutches separately daily and they are really hunting for greens now. Even tho I give them greens must not be the same as spring goodness.
 
So far I have only two does and one buck. In a moment of crazed hope and expectation of oncoming spring I bred the does. They're due in a couple of days now and it was below zero *again* this morning. I'm really getting tired of this. At this point I'm beginning to believe in the kind of climate change made by ppl who think there are too many people, but that's just my weariness... unless it's true of course...

Anyway, I bought them galvanized half-moon shaped bowls that hook onto the cage bars. I bang the ice out of them twice a day (most days) on a 4x6 support post near their cages. The chickens think the shards of ice are a special treat. 😂 I give them warm water from a milk jug. Then I do it again, and again, and...

Then I dump the sheep's giant ice cube outside of the barn and give them 4-5 gallons of warm water, then the poultry...
(You can get those giant ice cubes out of the buckets fairly easily by turning them upside down and pouring a bit of hot water over the bucket until you hear it release. Under no circumstances should you stomp the bottom of the bucket, unless you wanted to buy another one anyway, because it *will* break the bottom.)
 
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So far I have only two does and one buck. In a moment of crazed hope and expectation of oncoming spring I bred the does. They're due in a couple of days now and it was below zero *again* this morning. I'm really getting tired of this. At this point I'm beginning to believe in the kind of climate change made by ppl who think there are too many people, but that's just my weariness... unless it's true of course...

Anyway, I bought them galvanized half-moon shaped bowls that hook onto the cage bars. I bang the ice out of them twice a day (most days) on a 4x6 support post near their cages. The chickens think the shards of ice are a special treat. 😂 I give them warm water from a milk jug. Then I do it again, and again, and...

Then I dump the sheep's giant ice cube outside of the barn and give them 4-5 gallons of warm water, then the poultry...
(You can get those giant ice cubes out of the buckets fairly easily by turning them upside down and pouring a bit of hot water over the bucket until you hear it release. Under no circumstances should you stomp the bottom of the bucket, unless you wanted to buy another one anyway, because it *will* break the bottom.
have a nice nesting box and when she pulls fur she's going at any time, like now ha. there may be some blood, usually is, that's OK. she will keep them warm and covered up and when they need air she will open it up a bit. wind block and they will be fine. I hope it warms up for you, winter has gone on long enuf for you. and yes they do f with the weather. hang in there.
 
Yeah, I sometimes have flipped bowls. I'm in Western West Virginia and I used the black rubber bowls all winter. I don't like the fact that they are rubber and I know it leaches into the water a bit, but I changed the water 2 times a day everyday during use. Since the weather has changed I went back to the bottles which I prefer. For the metal bowls, are you able to get the ice out easily?
i whack the bowls on the side of the hutch but I kept 2 bowls in the garage and switched out. man i'm glad we MAY be thru the worst of the freezing cold. exhausting, wearing bibs and layers gaaaaa
 
I use the snappy fit bowls also but I love these dog bowls from dollar tree. They have different sizes too. I also use these bowls for pellets when I put rabbits in tractors or the 52. oz ones for kits that are still with their mom. F1B4CDDF-E136-4AF7-9022-84E8CE70BAB3.pngCB89CEEE-2399-41A2-8C13-836A2E1B2188.png (I couldn’t find a link but just search dollar tree dog bowls. Or look for them in the dog section at the store.).
They bend really easy to let the ice out and I just bring a water can out and fill them up after I dump the ice out. I also take their water bottles off the cages so they will use the bowls and not try to use the water bottles.
 
Thanks @Scooter1A! I didn't know they sometimes bled when pulling fur, so I'm glad to know I should expect that. Or maybe you meant they have ******l bleeding with birthing... that, I expect, having given birth a few times. 😄
o yes I meant birthing ha. but not your first rodeo so .....u got it.
 
My rabbits have an insulated shelter leading to a windowed shelter (where pellets and water are kept) and free access to a fenced yard with brush piles. Even on those days it dipped to -20* they chose to be out running and nibbling. We got 14" first week kits were coming out. I worried about them getting lost in snow so much deeper than them. Then I saw the buck put his nose down, push with his hind legs like a snow plow. He plowed paths to several brush piles that they hide in and chew on.( Such a happy surprise)I have heated water bottles in shelter yet they often eat snow. My quail have a heated waterer in their aviary yet I noticed they would come peck snow from my boots so I often give them a snow ball they will flock to as a treat. My sister in law shared when she used crocks with her chickens they got frostbite faces and did better when she took the crocks away and just let them eat snow. someone on this forum posted they freeze blocks of ice with treats in them for their caged rabbits as winter water. Ice and snow would be a wild creatures water source in the cold north winters. Rabbits are not only well built for cold, but seem to enjoy it. Especially if you choose breeds carefully. I also think the ability to run and play helps. Think of yourself just sitting in the cold or working and playing...
Good point on being active vs sitting around in the cold, quietly suffering. And everything else too, of course. I want to give my three a nice warren when the ground thaws out. I can do it inside the "barn" with wind protection, etc., but neither heat nor insulation, or I can do it outside in the woods or in the meadow. with things like a woodpile or burrows or an added bank of earth on the north side (where our winds nearly always come from). Suggestions welcomed...
 
Good point on being active vs sitting around in the cold, quietly suffering. And everything else too, of course. I want to give my three a nice warren when the ground thaws out. I can do it inside the "barn" with wind protection, etc., but neither heat nor insulation, or I can do it outside in the woods or in the meadow. with things like a woodpile or burrows or an added bank of earth on the north side (where our winds nearly always come from). Suggestions welcomed...
sounds to me like you got it figured out. gonn'a be some work involved. i'm making a chicken chunnel with hardware cloth supported the arch with garden hose and zip ties. might work for bunnies but for now it's just for chickens. i have work to do gaaaaa
 
The biggest "trick" we use, though, which really seems to help the rabbits stay in good condition, is that in addition to giving them water twice a day, we give a each of them a treat-filled ice block. We freeze water in old yogurt/cottage cheese tubs, adding something tempting like apple cores or carrot peelings to be frozen into the middle. We leave these blocks in the cages all the time, and the rabbbits love to play with them and chew on them - they get hydrated, entertained, and good tooth-trimming round-the-clock
This is brilliant!

Many years ago, a local school was closed, and we bought at auction boxes of heavy chili bowls from the school cafeteria. The inside bottoms are rounded, larger at the top, so the ice pops out easily. The bowls are heavy, stay in place fairly well, and have been in service for over thirty years now. For large litters we bought large two-quart heavy cast metal bowls, much too heavy for the rabbits to move about or flip over. My favorite, though, are the one quart stoneware crocks. Yes, they can break, but I have many that are decades old. They stay in place fairly well, do not tip, and aren't chewable.

In severe cold, we bring up a garden watering can full of hot (not boiling, drinkable hot tea temperature) water to add the ice in the bowl. We'd rather add smaller amounts of water they will actually drink, than fill the water bowl to the brim and have it crack the bowl when it freezes. When it does freeze solid, they lick the ice until the next hot water treatment.

Usually, the hot water isn't needed. In the winter, we fill the bowls about half-full with fresh rainwater which we keep in barrels. In cold weather, the outside six inches or so of the barrel freezes, but you can usually break through the ice at the top to get to the free water in the center of the barrel. We catch water from the barn roof, and store it in three food-grade plastic barrels we bought inexpensively from a local food packager. Should it be so cold that the barrels freeze completely, we go back to hauling up the watering cans of heated water from the house.

The amount of water the rabbits drink is definitely related to the outside temperature here. On hot days, we use twice the water each watering to fill the bowls; they drink much less in cooler temps. The goal is to always give them enough to have a little water left in the bowl by the next watering. Rabbits that empty their water bowls before the next watering get a larger bowl, to ensure sufficient hydration.
 
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