Is eleven kits to many?

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My doe Silkie who is one yrs. old had had eleven kits on Christmas day. She failed on her first litter her had ten kits all on the cage floor. This time she insisted on building her nest outside the nest box. I check there tummies and there not as full as they should be. I'm not sure if I should cull any out or not ?
 
No, first feed the doe for how much milk she has to make.
And see if a nestbox in that spot with the nest moved in works. Then the kits need less energy to keep warm.
 
My doe Silkie who is one yrs. old had had eleven kits on Christmas day. She failed on her first litter her had ten kits all on the cage floor. This time she insisted on building her nest outside the nest box. I check there tummies and there not as full as they should be. I'm not sure if I should cull any out or not ?
That's a pretty big litter, and how they'll do depends on how big your doe is and how well she provides for the kits. Some does can raise 14-15, others struggle to raise more than eight.

@tambayo's comment about feeding the doe well is good advice. I'd up her ration by at least half again, and also give her about 1 Tbl BOSS (black oil sunflower seeds) each day, which provides extra fat for her body to make milk. Make doubly sure she has unlimited clean water, as well. Keep an eye on the body condition of the doe.

I'd definitely move the bunnies into a nest box. Once their bunnies are born, no matter where they nested, does will usually feed them wherever they are moved.

If the bunnies are fed, even if they're not as full as you'd like, I'd give it time. Some bunnies, especially those in smaller litters, look like feeder pigs, but that's not necessary for kits to be healthy.

However, if you see any of them becoming truly skinny and weak, you might consider culling the smallest one or two. It has been my observation that if there is not enough milk for a litter, only a few kits thrive, while most of the litter struggles and many are lost or never thrive. In that case, I sacrifice one or two rather than lose most of the litter.
 
My doe Silkie who is one yrs. old had had eleven kits on Christmas day. She failed on her first litter her had ten kits all on the cage floor. This time she insisted on building her nest outside the nest box. I check there tummies and there not as full as they should be. I'm not sure if I should cull any out or not ?
My doe had 13 a couple of months ago, she lost a few, and adopted in one, she ended up raising out ten. She needed lots of extra food and looked pretty rough after weaning, but now she's looking better and has gained back weight. :) She's a great mom! Just keep an eye on their bellies, you'll know if they're getting enough food.
 
Thank you for your reply's I've been feeding she extra pellets and a 1/4 cup calf mana and I feed my rabbits a few leaves of greens in the morning when I top off the straw and water. I live in central Ca. and nighttime temp been in low 50's so I wasn't concerned but today I'll move them back into the nest box.
 
Something to keep on hand, if you can find it, is nettle leaves(health food stores in winter, overgrown fields in summer). I've had overwhelming success with milk production, either when not producing at all or not producing enough. I notice a difference within a day. Just a teaspoon to tablespoon, usually only need one dose: every doe I've fed, thinks it's a delicious treat
 
Something to keep on hand, if you can find it, is nettle leaves(health food stores in winter, overgrown fields in summer). I've had overwhelming success with milk production, either when not producing at all or not producing enough. I notice a difference within a day. Just a teaspoon to tablespoon, usually only need one dose: every doe I've fed, thinks it's a delicious treat
I have nettle growing in my yard very invasive I'll start saving leaves thank you
 
Something to keep on hand, if you can find it, is nettle leaves(health food stores in winter, overgrown fields in summer). I've had overwhelming success with milk production, either when not producing at all or not producing enough. I notice a difference within a day. Just a teaspoon to tablespoon, usually only need one dose: every doe I've fed, thinks it's a delicious treat
As in stinging nettle? I have a doe that just had 10 kits. Would like to help her along and do have stinging nettle on hand for tea (for us). Only 1 dose a day or 1 dose for the entire time she's lactating?
 
As in stinging nettle? I have a doe that just had 10 kits. Would like to help her along and do have stinging nettle on hand for tea (for us). Only 1 dose a day or 1 dose for the entire time she's lactating?

I cut it fresh, spread it on an old bedsheet, roll that up and knead it thoroughly, then I let it wilt on the sheet for half a day or so, then feed it. A handful, or as much as they eat. The rest gets dried and stored for winter.

My proceedure might be overkill to get rid of the stingyness and needs rdrie weather so that it dries fast, just mowing and wilting might work too.

Small doses may be great treats, and worth a try when a rabbit doesn't eat, but I doubt that that will do much regarding nutrition for a nursing doe, but it definitly doesn't hurt.

Is stinging nettle widespread in the US? When my BiL came over here the first time he ran his hand through this lush green on a walk and was somewhat surprised by the effect :D
 
This map is the USDA zones, Stinging Nettle apparently grows from 3-7, I'm in 7B so I'm at the hottest it will possibly grow.

Any of the greens, blues, or purples on the main map are grow zones for it but the yellows and oranges aren't.

I don't know that I've ever run across any, though I do have a form of pigweed that looks similar (no spines though) and a nasty little nightshade that likes to stab you with thorns.... we also sometimes get Giant Hogweed which isn't to be played with at all.

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