Stormy
Well-known member
One of my does last week gave birth to 15 kits!! That's a record. I think she did 14 last time. Her sis does 12. But here's the rub: I always lose kits until I only have about 8 left. That really sucks! So this time I took 7 of the smallest babies out of the nest box, and created a little nest for them, and fed them on her sister who was beginning to wean her litter. Believe it or not, she nursed them! The two does were co-housed til recently (one exposed to pasteurella so has to go) I was leaving the box in her cage but when she began peeing in it I took it out and put the babies in a separate cage. Big mistake, the babies froze in the night Lesson learned. I didn't realize she was keeping them warm I am very sad about that (duh!)
Anyways, this seems so weird she'd have such large litters if she can't keep them fed. The only time I have successfully seen 14 babies make it in one box was when two colony does decided to put their babies in the same box (the second doe had a surprise pregnancy after having broken out of the pen for 5 minutes - that is all it takes!) With all the extra milk flow I had fat babies though still lost some.
Why would she have such large litters if she can't keep them alive? Does anyone successfully raise large litters? Do you let nature take its course, or intervene?
Anyways, this seems so weird she'd have such large litters if she can't keep them fed. The only time I have successfully seen 14 babies make it in one box was when two colony does decided to put their babies in the same box (the second doe had a surprise pregnancy after having broken out of the pen for 5 minutes - that is all it takes!) With all the extra milk flow I had fat babies though still lost some.
Why would she have such large litters if she can't keep them alive? Does anyone successfully raise large litters? Do you let nature take its course, or intervene?