I'm new to raising rabbits (for meat, pelts, and pleasure). I have a four-acre farm with vegetables and many other crops and have a yearround growing season, more or less, because I live in the tropics and get rain yearround. So winter feeding is not an issue. Since rabbits are herbivorous browsers by nature, it makes sense to me that I should be able to feed my rabbits on green fodder alone (but i also have a regular supply of surplus bananas and I can grow fodder beets to supply any additional carbohydrate requirements, although I hear that rabbits don't need much carbohydrates nor do they digest them well). Green fodder possibilities I have include pidgeon pea leaves (a legume roughly comparable to alfalfa in nutritional usefulness for livestock), lots of wild plantain weed and the occasional dandelion, plenty of different wild grasses, comfrey, sugarcane leaves, banana leaves, ti leaves, nasturtiums, cilantro, parsley, basil, lettuce, arugula, katuk, moringa (once my seedling tree gets bigger), and probably a few others I'm forgetting. All of these are available year round, and many of them I have already successfully introduced to my rabbits in addition to their pellets.
Can I give unlimited grasses and greens in place of pellets? Most info I read about rabbits overeating seems to be a result of too much concentrated carbs or protein (like corn, fruit, or soy or the concentrated energy and protein in commercial pellets) rather than too much fodder, but can a rabbit overeat on fodder too? How much of the legume fodder do they need compared to grasses or herbs? How much high fiber grasses in relation to tender herbs? Does it matter that much anyway? I understand that fiber is very important to rabbits, and too much protein is not so great, but any further specifics that could be outlined would be great.
I have some pellets now but they are not organic, and I would rather not buy them again if at all possible. Speed of growth and minor differences in fryer carcass weight don't concern me at all. A little extra work gathering fodder daily doesn't concern me either. Producing high-quality, nutrient-dense meat from healthy animals DOES interest me, as does feeding my livestock 100% sustainably and humanely.
For further context, the rabbits, one buck and one doe, just recently mated, each have their own wire-floored hutch about ten square feet in size. According to breeder I bought them from, the doe is half Champagne, half New Zealand, and the buck is pure New Zealand.
Any problems, tips, advice, or other information relating to feeding my breeding rabbits and growing bunnies in the manner outlined would be gratefully received!
Thanks!
Can I give unlimited grasses and greens in place of pellets? Most info I read about rabbits overeating seems to be a result of too much concentrated carbs or protein (like corn, fruit, or soy or the concentrated energy and protein in commercial pellets) rather than too much fodder, but can a rabbit overeat on fodder too? How much of the legume fodder do they need compared to grasses or herbs? How much high fiber grasses in relation to tender herbs? Does it matter that much anyway? I understand that fiber is very important to rabbits, and too much protein is not so great, but any further specifics that could be outlined would be great.
I have some pellets now but they are not organic, and I would rather not buy them again if at all possible. Speed of growth and minor differences in fryer carcass weight don't concern me at all. A little extra work gathering fodder daily doesn't concern me either. Producing high-quality, nutrient-dense meat from healthy animals DOES interest me, as does feeding my livestock 100% sustainably and humanely.
For further context, the rabbits, one buck and one doe, just recently mated, each have their own wire-floored hutch about ten square feet in size. According to breeder I bought them from, the doe is half Champagne, half New Zealand, and the buck is pure New Zealand.
Any problems, tips, advice, or other information relating to feeding my breeding rabbits and growing bunnies in the manner outlined would be gratefully received!
Thanks!