Okayy, thank you<3That's a liquid measuring cup but will do just fine for measuring pellets, etc.
Ah, is gram not the way to weight the pellet??Measuring is by volume, so the cup you have is fine--we have those and also plastic scoops in various size, using them mostly for cooking measurement, but, they also work. Also have a food scale, but it is in grams so it is not useful for rabbits.
Hoppy's 2 month and 27 days, and a Netherland Dwarf..I have pretty much always gone by grams since "cups" and other stuff just confused the lights off of me.
But 50gr of pellets for a 400gr rabbit is definetly too much, especially if you feed them daily veggies, unless said rabbit is still younger than 6 months.
My adult rabbits of 5 to 5.5kg got about 40-50g pellets daily. So if your rabbit is an adult and truly that tiny, then i guess for you, measuring a few tablespoons of pellets works equally well.
I can see your confusion when trying to convert grams to ounces. There are liquid (fluid) ounces and weight ounces. One liquid ounce is not the same as one ounce of weight (1/16th of a pound). That is why I clarified that the measuring cup you pictured is for liquid measurements.Ah, is gram not the way to weight the pellet??
Sometimes ago I search about how many gram in oz and when I calculated it, my rabbit (400gr) eat around 50gr pellet/day
Is this wrong?
Ooh, thanksss, this's very helpful><Oh boy, was I confused when I started to use american recipes
Turns out, things like Cup, Tablespoon, and so on are exactly defined measurements,
1 Cup=238.6 ml - for this usage 1/4 Liter is close enough.
1 Tbsp = 14,7ml
OMG I should have done my homework back then T.TI can see your confusion when trying to convert grams to ounces. There are liquid (fluid) ounces and weight ounces. One liquid ounce is not the same as one ounce of weight (1/16th of a pound). That is why I clarified that the measuring cup you pictured is for liquid measurements.
So that 1 liquid measuring cup can be used to estimate 1 cup of greens. It can also be used to estimate, say, 1/4 cup of pellets. It did not occur to me that you might be referring to the oz measurements for the pellets. Grams are weight. The ounces in the liquid measuring cup are volume (not weight).
I-I thought it was my brain's not working....Heck, just convert to metric, that is so confusing. What is that picture of a randomly cup shaped thingy ought to tell me? A regular WHAT?
Very sorry but I... don't understand it(View attachment 63285This is regular
I'm sorry, but, the truth is my math's very bad...Anyone that has an electronic calculator can convert easily. 12 of our cookbooks have conversion tables, or you have a computer, evidently, so it isn't too hard to find with one--not like when I was in college--slide rule was our calculator--Texas Instruments came out with one in my senior year that was $399 and it had 4 functions, add, subtract, multiply and divide and was the size of my biology text book.
A measure cup to measure pelletsHeck, just convert to metric, that is so confusing. What is that picture of a randomly cup shaped thingy ought to tell me? A regular WHAT?
I see,Thank you for the information!A measure cup to measure pellets
I have a food scale that has pounds, cups, ounces, grams.Measuring is by volume, so the cup you have is fine--we have those and also plastic scoops in various size, using them mostly for cooking measurement, but, they also work. Also have a food scale, but it is in grams so it is not useful for rabbits.
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