- Thread starter
- #11
nawma
Chillin' with the herd
My does are all 5 days into gestation today. I will definately begin to free feed them. I did free feed them once they kindled and strangely enough none of the does consumed that much food during the two to three days they had live kits.
I did not fill their nesting boxes all the way to the top. All does made a thick nest of hair for their second litters. Two of my does were completely in the dark about making a nest the first time and threw most of the nesting materials out of their cage. I replaced it and they all pulled hair. The babies were never cold to the touch until the last day when they were gone. The second litters all had full bellies.
The building I have them in is cinder block walls with metal corrugated roofs. Last week when I lost all four of my second litters our temps were 35-45 at night and 60-70 during the day. I have inside thermometer that got down to 45 degrees on average all week. There is a "breathing" in the building but you cannot feel a breeze. Also last week during the period the kits were still alive we had a horrible wind
storm. A roof blew off a dog pen not far from rabbitry. Could this have scared all four does enough to abandon their litters? If so why would kits die with full bellies?
I was completely prepared when none of my first litters lived. I was even prepared for the possibility that some of second litters might not succeed. I was totally unprepared when one of my does died the night she was to kindle and all four of my other litters died.
I did not fill their nesting boxes all the way to the top. All does made a thick nest of hair for their second litters. Two of my does were completely in the dark about making a nest the first time and threw most of the nesting materials out of their cage. I replaced it and they all pulled hair. The babies were never cold to the touch until the last day when they were gone. The second litters all had full bellies.
The building I have them in is cinder block walls with metal corrugated roofs. Last week when I lost all four of my second litters our temps were 35-45 at night and 60-70 during the day. I have inside thermometer that got down to 45 degrees on average all week. There is a "breathing" in the building but you cannot feel a breeze. Also last week during the period the kits were still alive we had a horrible wind
storm. A roof blew off a dog pen not far from rabbitry. Could this have scared all four does enough to abandon their litters? If so why would kits die with full bellies?
I was completely prepared when none of my first litters lived. I was even prepared for the possibility that some of second litters might not succeed. I was totally unprepared when one of my does died the night she was to kindle and all four of my other litters died.