since this post is updated....
I thought I would update on how to cull wee kits.
Hold the kit so the back of the head faces the direction you are going to strike. Hit the back of the head sharply against a solid object (I will often use a shelf or the corner of a building). Death is immediate and no chance of suffering if you don't whack it down on the ground hard enough.
You need to do what serves your herd the best. For my meat rabbits... raising 8 kits means bigger hardier kits. For my lanky holland lops (yes I have some pet quality ladies) they can handle 6-7 kits easily and I"m not worried about them being big hardy fast-growing youngsters. My small, typey girls handle 5 kits well, and the dwarf girls do four nicely. More than that I and I cull down for colour, type etc.
All my dead rabbits, regardless of size, now feed our two cats.
I thought I would update on how to cull wee kits.
Hold the kit so the back of the head faces the direction you are going to strike. Hit the back of the head sharply against a solid object (I will often use a shelf or the corner of a building). Death is immediate and no chance of suffering if you don't whack it down on the ground hard enough.
You need to do what serves your herd the best. For my meat rabbits... raising 8 kits means bigger hardier kits. For my lanky holland lops (yes I have some pet quality ladies) they can handle 6-7 kits easily and I"m not worried about them being big hardy fast-growing youngsters. My small, typey girls handle 5 kits well, and the dwarf girls do four nicely. More than that I and I cull down for colour, type etc.
All my dead rabbits, regardless of size, now feed our two cats.