Snowball_101
Member
I have a small pure white bunny and his/her feet are a rusty yellow color. I know it’s from his/her pee. Should I clean it or let it groom itself? I’m just worried the pee will irritate the skin.
And thank you very much for the advice! I will start working on what you said! I’ll clean out his cage and start the potty training. I really needed advice because this is my first ever small pet.
OMG, so precious! Those are probably the cleanest bunny feet I have ever seen, haha. Really nice set up and advice as well (sorry, not trying to snipe).Your rabbit looks so tiny. What is his age?
I'm going to combine this with your other question about a hay rack. I would suggest that you top your rabbit's litter totally with hay. Not only will it solve your problem with the hay rack, but it will make it easier for bunny to get to his hay. (You mentioned he was getting aggressive trying to get to the hay.) You want them eating tons of hay. That means he should not have to work hard to get to it. The easier the better. (Don't worry. Rabbits won't eat soiled hay.)
It will also solve another issue (or help anyway) with his feet discoloring. The bedding shown in your photos doesn't stop him from laying in pee-soaked bedding. I can't tell from the photo, but it appears that the bedding might be covering the whole cage floor. It is better to have no bedding on the cage floor and instead have a large litter box filled with the bedding and topped with hay. That will get him started on potty training. They prefer to potty where it is soft.
The hay on top of the litter also serves as a barrier between the soaked bedding and his paws. It will help keep his paws from getting soiled.
This photo shows the bottom of my white rabbit's feet. I never cleaned them. He did that himself. We also had the hay-topped litter box set up with no bedding on the cage floor.
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I also have a pic somewhere of him sitting in his litter box but I couldn't find it. The next photo shows the litter box though below the shelf he's laying on. You can see it topped with hay (hay is refreshed twice a day) and you can see how large it is as well.
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