bubba man
Well-known member
can i put a salt spool in the hutch ??
yes, that is a better way of saying what I meant...MaggieJ":3dp49kpl said:When Michael says we are "policed" I think he means that errors in advice are generally caught by members and an alternate view put forward. The Moderators and Admins have more powers, but RT has such a well-informed and well-mannered membership, that it is very rare for one of us to have to use them.
I agree -- get and read a good rabbit handbook and then ask questions about things that puzzle you or that are not covered in the book. Most of what we deal with is troubleshooting specific issues and problems.
If cost of the books is an issue, you can buy second-hand. I like to use abebooks.com . . . the prices are usually very reasonable and sometimes shipping within the US is free.
:good-luck:
akane":3ct3jv70 said:Adding a pure salt source is rarely necessary though. As I said when you have animals on straight pasture sometimes a supplemental source is needed and that would apply to some all fresh food diets but pure salt still isn't usually the best choice. Certainly not in uncontrolled amounts that a salt lick would provide. Livestock will start eating dirt for the combination of mineral salts and not just sodium. A very low mineral source will lead to eating excess salt in an attempt to acquire minerals first. That's why I offer himalayan salt, loose minerals, electrolyte powders, or soft mineral blocks rather than higher salt hard trace mineral blocks and I never use white salt licks. My veterinary classes and numerous things I've read have pointed out that sodium by itself is rarely as useful while mineral deficiencies are a lot more common than only the presence of low sodium. Even for my own health I use salt that has bound minerals and add 1-3 drops of lugol's iodine 2% to something at some point in the day rather than ever buying iodized table salt for eating or cooking.
Hmm... I'll have to check the chunks I added for our buns, but I think they all still have at least some portions left, even in the grow-out cages. And I only gave them a chunk that was about 2" round and 1/2" thick in each cage. That was early/mid-December, I think. So they're not going through them all that fast... but our humidity is also a lot lower than yours, GBov.GBov":2237rtsi said:How long does the Himalayan salt last in cages? I tried the red salt blocks a few years ago and they just melted away in our humidity, even the big bits were gone in a few days.
GBov":187duvaj said:How long does the Himalayan salt last in cages? I tried the red salt blocks a few years ago and they just melted away in our humidity, even the big bits were gone in a few days.
MaggieJ":1jydbesg said:I used the red salt/mineral blocks, just knocking off a chunk as needed. When my rabbits were in cages, I put the chunk in one of those straight-sided ramekins from the dollar store. They were two or three for a dollar in those days. Because the ramekins have a flat bottom and straight sides, it was unusual for the rabbits to knock them over -- and even if they did now and again, I'd fix it when I fed them. No damage to the cage wire that I could see.
I realize some of you are dealing with extreme humidity, but at least the salt would be contained and still accessible to the buns.
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