MonsterElla
Member
Hi. I have a problem concerning my rabbit's nourishment. I am doing to following:
[!NOTE: I can only not feel his bones but feel the "details" of his spine. It's creepy! And I'm saddened because my efforts never seem to work. But he's happy and jumpy, not sad and lazy. He's active, very playful actually.]
1. Giving him unlimited access to vegetables and grass [alternately] (I never allow more than 2 hours of empty food basin; it should always have something to eat).
2. Only caging him 5 hours, 5 times a week (that's when I have to leave for uni); the rest while I'm at home, he roams around my room and about the garden and the entire house.
3. Had him checked, negative of worms.
4. Unlimited water supply.
5. Comfortable bedding and sleeping area.
6. Brush him twice a day.
7. Play with him at least 2 hours everyday (he loves to be cuddled and played with until he falls asleep on my lap).
8. Towel-bath him at least twice a week to clean his fur from dust and other dirt.
9. Have no kid play harshly with him.
10. Away from presence of predators to avoid intimidation.
11. Released into the garden every morning to have his morning stretch and a ray of morning sunlight.
12. Have his stool checked from time to time and I never saw any change; his droppings are either soft, hard, fairly round droppings OR wet, soft dark droppings that look like cluster of grapes. I have asked breeders about it and they said it's normal and there's nothing wrong about the feces.
13. And yes, believe me when I say I even talk to him... aloud... as if he's going to reply. LOL! :biggrin2:
I only started giving him pellets the other day. I think the non-pellet diet is the reason for his being underweight? If there's anything wrong or lacking in my care list, what should I remove or add?
If it's the non-pellet diet that's making him still skinny despite my efforts, when shall I be expecting improvement on his body?
[!NOTE: I can only not feel his bones but feel the "details" of his spine. It's creepy! And I'm saddened because my efforts never seem to work. But he's happy and jumpy, not sad and lazy. He's active, very playful actually.]
1. Giving him unlimited access to vegetables and grass [alternately] (I never allow more than 2 hours of empty food basin; it should always have something to eat).
2. Only caging him 5 hours, 5 times a week (that's when I have to leave for uni); the rest while I'm at home, he roams around my room and about the garden and the entire house.
3. Had him checked, negative of worms.
4. Unlimited water supply.
5. Comfortable bedding and sleeping area.
6. Brush him twice a day.
7. Play with him at least 2 hours everyday (he loves to be cuddled and played with until he falls asleep on my lap).
8. Towel-bath him at least twice a week to clean his fur from dust and other dirt.
9. Have no kid play harshly with him.
10. Away from presence of predators to avoid intimidation.
11. Released into the garden every morning to have his morning stretch and a ray of morning sunlight.
12. Have his stool checked from time to time and I never saw any change; his droppings are either soft, hard, fairly round droppings OR wet, soft dark droppings that look like cluster of grapes. I have asked breeders about it and they said it's normal and there's nothing wrong about the feces.
13. And yes, believe me when I say I even talk to him... aloud... as if he's going to reply. LOL! :biggrin2:
I only started giving him pellets the other day. I think the non-pellet diet is the reason for his being underweight? If there's anything wrong or lacking in my care list, what should I remove or add?
If it's the non-pellet diet that's making him still skinny despite my efforts, when shall I be expecting improvement on his body?