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Phildave > Intel > Grow you own rabbit food

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Grow you own rabbit food

The old-timers who wintered their rabbits on food they'd grown themselves fed them such things as stock beets and cabbage in winter as well as their grain and hay. So can you.

Pea and bean vines can be cured like hay and make an excellent hay substitute or supplement. In season, rabbits like anything green, but you must be careful not to feed them plants that are outrightly poisonous, such as chokecherry or rhubarb leaves, or potato peels with sprouts or ones that have been in the sun long enough to get even the slightest touch of green.

Other greens are only mildly poisonous in the uncooked state such as pigweed, amaranth greens, spinach, comfrey, and Swiss chard—but for a creature with a small body weight like a rabbit, especially a young rabbit, these can be a problem, too.

Much of the reason that people develop fear of growing their own rabbit food, or have bad experiences with home feeding of rabbits is because they don't understand how very many greens, wild or domestic, are not fully safe to feed rabbits, and which are. Before feeding a leafy green or herb for the first time, check the list under "Edible for Rabbits," below, to see if there is a warning of any sort about it. Stick to feeding them human-type salad greens unless you know for sure a wild one is safe. If cooking is advised for a green or category of greens (the amaranth family), don't feed it to rabbits who, of course, would be eating it raw. If it's in the least toxic, don't feed it to them. If it might have chemical residues on it, don't feed it to them. I plant extra rows of lettuce for them. And when I weed in summer, I take along a bucket to put the pulled edible weeds in for the rabbits. Feeding this way you never have to buy a rabbit pellet and they do fine. When fed home-grown stuff, they'll grow a little slower (and more normally) to that 2 lb. butchering size. But it's far cheaper, and I have organic meat because from conception on, they've been nourished with home-grown foods and greens, or hay and grain from a source I know is chemical-free.


Contributor's Note

This intel reflects only one of my activities. I also write about and/or have websites on Vespa Scooters, Lambretta Scooters, Hardy Banana plants, Medical memorabilia, reborn baby dolls and much more. Hope you enjoyed the read, Philip Davey

Contributed by Phildave on June 23, 2008, at 12:38 PM UTC.

PLEASE VISIT THE CONTRIBUTOR'S WEBSITE
Vintage & used Lambretta motor scooters
The one stop shop for everything Lambretta
www.lambretta-shop.co.uk

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This intel was contributed by Phildave


Phildave

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