New to meat rabbits help? Please

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Keli

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Quick question is a New Zealand cross Flemish good for a meat rabbit, someone want to sell me a proven buck for $30 and a doe with a 3 week old litter of 9 for $50 ?? Is that a good price?? Thank you for your help :)
 
Flemish giant crosses can make good meat rabbits.
It all depends on what you are looking for though.
I find that they are often more docile than new zealands can be. Not always, and not all new zealands are feisty. Many people tell me that flemish crosses have larger bones, but I haven't weighed new zealand, cali, and Flemish giant mix bones to compare them.

An adult doe with a 3 week old litter is probably the worst possible choice for a beginner to start on. The kits are very delicate at that age. Moving them or changing their diets could stress them greatly. Stressing kits can increase disease susceptibility, lower growth rates, and possibly be fatal if a GI imbalance occurs.

The price is a bit high for meat mutts in my area.
Pedigreed calis and New Zealands are sold around the same price as that buck.
Kits aren't really worth much until they are weaned, because weaning enteritis can cause losses. For that reason, meat breeders judge the value of a doe by how many kits she successfully weans, instead of how many she gives birth to.

Is there something special about these particular rabbits to warrant the higher price tag? (organic, non-GMO fed?)
Why are they selling the doe with a 3 week old litter? Are they getting out of rabbits entirely, and if so, why?
Are they skittish and hard to handle?
Are they sick? (sneezing, diahrea, bloated bellies?)
Do the kits growout too slowly to make them economical?
Is the doe mean? ("Protective" is often used as a coverup term for "animal that bites".) Mean does do NOT make better mothers than calm does.
 
Zass has offered a lot of great advice.

I had a Flemish x buck and he was a terrific herd sire but unlike most Flemish he had a very meaty body to go along with thicker bones and he did well on a mostly hay diet - luckily he passed this trait onto his offspring :D

In my experience the denser bone is a more dominant trait but as long as they stay meaty it is not an issue for me, although it is a bit harder to do a cervical dislocation on big boned rabbits. I have also had California crosses and they had significantly finer bones making it very easy to dispatch them and for my grinder to turn them into ground raw dog food.

I've also dispatched some French Lops - now those guys had HUGE dense bones and I was exhausted after doing just 5 :(

The price depends on your area - meat rabbits range from $10 to $50 around here with the mutts being less expensive and the purebreds more.
 
I asked her why she is selling them? She said she is too busy and going back to school. The does are 2 years old. She has 1, 9 month old that just weaned a litter. The 2 year olds have had 3 litters each and have lived, how many litters can a rabbit have? Should I ask her to keep them for another 2 weeks then would it be safe to move them ? Thx
 
Ask her if she can keep them another 2 weeks.

And tell her you are interested but could she work a better deal
for you on the price.

I bought a mom with a litter this summer. I got a package deal. I want
to say they were not quite 6 weeks when I got them. I sold the litter
when they got old enough and mom is still here.

Just have cages ready to put them in once you get them home.
A litter of 9 is going to be ready shortly for growout pens.
 
In theory a rabbit can have a litter every 31 days but it is hard on a doe and they start to wear out and become less productive.

My meat rabbits have 6 to 9 litters a year
 
If the does are open, they may be difficult to breed. A new move..
A new home... Different environment. Different water... All of these can
impact a doe's receptiveness.

Keep that in mind, along with one other thing. "SOME" people are not
completely honest... LOL. Don't believe everything you're told. I've seen this
happen hundreds of times to newcomers. You may be buying a ton of
frustration at a very expensive price.

Flemish crosses.........I've Never Used. Nor owned one for that matter in
the four decades I've raised meat rabbits. I've heard dozens complain about
longer grow-out times. Larger bone to meat ratios. Nothing truly positive
about this cross. Folks "think" bigger is better. With good meat rabbits that
isn't the case. It's the genetic package you're buying that determines your
success or failure.

IF you do your job right. It begins and ends
with you. Good luck, think twice, buy only once. Think long and hard before
you do this. If you're content, then jump-in...the water's not too cold......
most of the time. :x

Note: A doe with nine little ones three weeks old for fifty bucks isn't too
bad of a deal. DON'T expect her? to hold them for another two weeks and
"NOT" want more money for the doe and her litter.

Grumpy.
 
I talked to her and she said she would keep them for another 2 weeks ! And she say she processes them herself. I asked for a package deal for 2 does and 1 buck and 1 litter, she also has a 1 year old nz doe should I take her and the 1 other doe with her litter rather then the 2 cross does?? Omg so confusing!! :s
 
Keli":2ydq8zhk said:
I talked to her and she said she would keep them for another 2 weeks ! And she say she processes them herself. I asked for a package deal for 2 does and 1 buck and 1 litter, she also has a 1 year old nz doe should I take her and the 1 other doe with her litter rather then the 2 cross does?? Omg so confusing!! :s


If she process them herself, that is good. People who enjoy the taste of rabbit are the best to buy from. Instead of excusing animals with problems, they are more likely to be looking for reasons to eat them. ;) As to which one to take...ask the breeder which doe will throw more, faster growing kits. Or, buy them all and save the one you like best.

__________ Sun Dec 21, 2014 8:20 pm __________

When you take the kits at 5 weeks, do your best not to change their diet. Ideally, you could grow them out and butcher them on the exact same feed the previous breeder was using.

In the meantime, you can convert the does to whatever it is you intend to feed. Abrupt food transitions are advised against in most animals, but with rabbits it's a bit different, because GI problems often prove fatal, especially with weanlings.
 
She said she would sell the does and her babies (in 2 weeks) and 1 other doe and her buck for $100 is that a good price ? I asked for a package deal... But I have another breeder that sells pure nz for $15 but they are only 3-4 months old .... So confused :(
 
3 proven adults (buck and 2 does) and a litter 9 for $100 sounds good to me.

But if you are just starting out with rabbits then I'd go for a trio of the younger NZ for $45 to see if you like them.
 
I think the adult rabbits are worth the money. She offered a good deal, and the kits would be freezer camped pretty quickly.
It would spare having your first freezer bunnies being kits you lovingly raised. (This was hard for me)

Young, inexpensive rabbits are usually the best choice for those just starting out. But...
"Pure new zealand" can mean anything...Someone sold me a "pure new zealand" kit with dwarf genes earlier in the year... :roll:

There are many people who will assume, or at least call anything pure, especially if it makes a sale. ;)
 
They are Flemish nz cross.. And it is for 2 does and 1 litter of 9 and 1 buck..
 
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