Ablebreeze
Active member
I've been doing a lot of research and reading and comparing of pellets to find the best one for me and my meat rabbits.
1. Rabbits make their own vitamin b so they don't need that in their pellets, but I've only found 2 pellets that don't add it. 1 is almost $1/lb (not economical). The other I have to drive through 2 states to buy. (Not economical or feasible).
The research I've done says excess vitamin b weakens their immune system.
Super frustrating.
2. Rabbits need vitamin k (as do most animals). There is only 1 approved vitamin k supplement for animal feed and it's only approved for poultry. (Menadione Sodium Bisulfite Complex) It's in almost every pellet as well.
3. Corn isn't good and you can sort of avoid it, but most still have distillers grain by products which is more prone to mold than straight ground corn.
4. Then there are the ones that just list "forage products, roughage products, and plant protein" claiming their mix is proprietary and therefore can't disclose the ingredients.
Very frustrating trying to find a good pellet.
1. Rabbits make their own vitamin b so they don't need that in their pellets, but I've only found 2 pellets that don't add it. 1 is almost $1/lb (not economical). The other I have to drive through 2 states to buy. (Not economical or feasible).
The research I've done says excess vitamin b weakens their immune system.
Super frustrating.
2. Rabbits need vitamin k (as do most animals). There is only 1 approved vitamin k supplement for animal feed and it's only approved for poultry. (Menadione Sodium Bisulfite Complex) It's in almost every pellet as well.
3. Corn isn't good and you can sort of avoid it, but most still have distillers grain by products which is more prone to mold than straight ground corn.
4. Then there are the ones that just list "forage products, roughage products, and plant protein" claiming their mix is proprietary and therefore can't disclose the ingredients.
Very frustrating trying to find a good pellet.