Orrin
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 12, 2018
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An "oops" litter arrived at our house and we didn't even know it until this week. (We got two female rescues from a shelter and they spaying operation on one of them either didn't pan out or didn't happen.)
Anyhow, we have nine lively kits (no stillbirths) and the shelter wants to take them away from us. Like right now! The shelter people are afraid of unwanted pregnancies in this new litter. Although we do not know their exact age we feel as though we have plenty of time before that will ever happen.
I want to keep the litter until we can determine the *** of the kits, then separate the bucks from the does. I definitely want to keep two, a beautiful silver-gray and one of the largest ones; bucks, of course. (The daddy is either a half-Flemmie or full-blooded Flemmie. He came from an "oops" litter, too.)
I finally get to my question. At what age will I be able to make a fairly accurate determination of the sexes? Right now, I am guessing they are about two weeks old.
Although the shadow obscures some of them, here are all nine. The picture was taken two days ago.
This is the largest one of the bunch.
Here is the runt of the litter. We find it hopping all over our free roam area, but worry about it because its little legs wobble as much as they hop. We are trying to supplement its feed with kitten milk formula with a dash of heavy whipping cream added. We used that in the past to rear a rescued cottontail kit that we raised to adulthood (and released).
Anyhow, we have nine lively kits (no stillbirths) and the shelter wants to take them away from us. Like right now! The shelter people are afraid of unwanted pregnancies in this new litter. Although we do not know their exact age we feel as though we have plenty of time before that will ever happen.
I want to keep the litter until we can determine the *** of the kits, then separate the bucks from the does. I definitely want to keep two, a beautiful silver-gray and one of the largest ones; bucks, of course. (The daddy is either a half-Flemmie or full-blooded Flemmie. He came from an "oops" litter, too.)
I finally get to my question. At what age will I be able to make a fairly accurate determination of the sexes? Right now, I am guessing they are about two weeks old.
Although the shadow obscures some of them, here are all nine. The picture was taken two days ago.
This is the largest one of the bunch.
Here is the runt of the litter. We find it hopping all over our free roam area, but worry about it because its little legs wobble as much as they hop. We are trying to supplement its feed with kitten milk formula with a dash of heavy whipping cream added. We used that in the past to rear a rescued cottontail kit that we raised to adulthood (and released).