Litter of 5, only one left

Baymule

Herd Master
Joined
Aug 22, 2010
Messages
33,092
Reaction score
98,659
Points
873
Location
East Texas
Sorry that you are having issues with your kits. yes, heat is hard on them. Don't breed in the hot months, give the does a rest. On the ice, save plastic bowls, like cool whip containers, sour cream/cottage cheese containers, fill with water, pop out the ice and give the big ice cube to the rabbits. They can chomp on the ice and not put holes in your water/ice bottles.
 

Larsen Poultry Ranch

Herd Master
Joined
May 20, 2019
Messages
1,707
Reaction score
5,685
Points
353
Location
Auburn, CA
You have beautiful rabbits. The colors are like a bouquet of flowers.
Thanks! The other 3 that were lost from Cinnamon's litter had 2 more colors, I wish they would have made it. I'm not planning to breed again until probably September due to the heat. I hope her next litter turns out just as colorful.
 

AmberLops

Herd Master
Joined
Mar 10, 2019
Messages
2,238
Reaction score
5,215
Points
353
Location
Middle Tennessee
They're beautiful!
It's normal for castors to look different at a young age.
I have a chestnut Holland lop and when she was a baby she looked orange with black lines all around her face and body....she was strange looking! But now she's 3 months old and she looks like your normal chestnut.
I have 2 Chestnut Netherlands and they were almost cream colored when they were young. They had almost no black on them and now, they're adults and they are the perfect chestnut!
Baby coats can sure change a lot and in about 4 months you should be noticing a difference ;)
 

Bunnylady

Herd Master
Joined
Nov 27, 2009
Messages
2,431
Reaction score
3,058
Points
353
Location
Wilmington, NC
Just for comparison, here are a few from my latest litter of Mini Rex:


20190620_092328.jpg

Opal, Booted Lilac Fawn, Booted Castor, Red. Can you see the darker edge on the Red's ears? Being brown (Chocolate based) it barely shows up, even on adult coats.

20190620_095023.jpg


This close-up of the Lilac Fawn is to show the same darker edge on the ears, which (being Lilac, i.e. Dilute Chocolate) is a pinkish, dove-gray; quite different from the blue-gray of the Opal next to it.
 

Larsen Poultry Ranch

Herd Master
Joined
May 20, 2019
Messages
1,707
Reaction score
5,685
Points
353
Location
Auburn, CA
Just for comparison, here are a few from my latest litter of Mini Rex:


View attachment 63514
Opal, Booted Lilac Fawn, Booted Castor, Red. Can you see the darker edge on the Red's ears? Being brown (Chocolate based) it barely shows up, even on adult coats.

View attachment 63515

This close-up of the Lilac Fawn is to show the same darker edge on the ears, which (being Lilac, i.e. Dilute Chocolate) is a pinkish, dove-gray; quite different from the blue-gray of the Opal next to it.
So pretty!
 

Larsen Poultry Ranch

Herd Master
Joined
May 20, 2019
Messages
1,707
Reaction score
5,685
Points
353
Location
Auburn, CA
Update on the bunnies: everyone is doing well and the babies are growing. Tan baby is the biggest and most adventurous. Castor baby is a little more timid and the gray baby is the most skittish. I think talking to and handling them every day is making a difference.

Tan baby will jump out of the cage when I open the door so I have to be a lot more watchful, she is fast! I haven't tried sexing them yet so it's wishful thinking on my part that tan baby is a girl. I will try to get pictures posted tonight.
 

AmberLops

Herd Master
Joined
Mar 10, 2019
Messages
2,238
Reaction score
5,215
Points
353
Location
Middle Tennessee
I would love to see pictures!
I'm glad they're doing well! And yep...there's always a cage-jumper in every litter! I have one right now...a little tort buck I decided to keep. He just falls right out. They do learn though!
 

Latest posts

Top