Sunday, March 31, 2013

It's been a while!

Hey! I'm back! haha I have been sooo busy lately that I had forgotten about my blog! I have so much to say but I'll have to break it up into separate blog posts or this will be way too long! So I think I will pick up where I left off. Maybelle had her litter on March 13th! They are obviously 2.5 weeks old now! They look like 3 little bucks... again... Boo. Lol! Fortunately I think they are all absolutely gorgeous! Each of them looks like my beautiful junior doe, Adaliene. They have huge, thick heads and tiny, tiny ears! They've all been named as well! Sterling, Arza, and Lil' Luke!

Lil' Luke, the sport <3

Sterling on the bottom, Arza on the top! Lol!

Lil' Luke and Arza

Grumpy pregnant Manda... sigh...

Oh, look! An unfamiliar face! This is our new junior doe!
TF Pistol Annie
A formal introduction will be included in my next post!


Monday, March 11, 2013

Baby Fever

There isn't much going on at the rabbitry lately. I have baby fever since I'm anxiously waiting for Maybelle's litter that is due Thursday. Eeee! I'm soooo excited! This is a repeat breeding and I'm hoping I can get similar results from her September litter. I'm really hoping I can send some babies to others soon. I have a few people wanting Hotots asap... :/ I guess I'll just keep focusing on improvement. Of course bunnies will come available, I'm just not going to breed quantity to fill the demand. I need to focus on my rabbits. Lol! Let's hope I can get some bunnies to everyone. I love seeing my bunnies go to their perfect homes. These little Dwarf Hotots are so worth the wait... <3

May's mustache <3

"Must continue nesting!!"
"Go away! I'm busy!" Lol

Mia looking gorgeous, as always.

Addy-such a itty bitty doe! I hope she grows a little! Lol!

Thursday, March 7, 2013

A Visitor

We have a little visitor at Little Rascal's Rabbitry tonight and through out the next week. Little Rascal's Sugah. Some of you may remember her from last year as Maybelliene's first baby. She was born in July but was fostered to a different doe because it was her mother's first litter and she was too panicked to take proper care of her litter.
In September, I sold Sugah along with her 'brother' out of the foster doe's litter to a sweet family to be loving, spoiled pets. I knew they were going to a great home from day one!
Sugah was accidentally bred a month ago. We didn't know she was pregnant until she started having contractions today. We talked for a while and I figured I could take her for the week to make sure she will be alright.
Fingers crossed for a healthy momma and a healthy litter!
Sugah, gorgeous girl at 7 1/2 months old. <3
Checking out her nest...

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Recommendations for Beginners

I'd like to share with you some of the things I wish I had known before getting started and had to learn my lesson the hard way. I hope this can help out some of the newer breeders that read my blog. There are loads of things I could cover in this post, but I'll cover the ones I think are the most important.

1. BEWARE OF JUNIORS!
This is one I wish I knew before getting started. I used to think that if a rabbit was expensive, it was an awesome rabbit. I trusted the breeders that if they were offering a rabbit for a lot of money, they would be selling me quality. This was not the case. I am guilty of buying an expensive pet quality rabbit that looked nice as a junior. I paid $175 for this nice buck. I had him transported across 8 states. I got him home and noticed a few things on the rabbit that weren't in the pictures I had seen nor were they ever mentioned by the breeder. The rabbit also soon became more and more aggressive and began biting for no reason. He definitely wasn't nipping either, he literally took chunks out of my hands/fingers. I kept him in hopes that he would grow out of it but his aggression progressed and only got worse. By the time he turned 8 months old, it was apparent that he was also pet quality at 4.02 lbs with a slipped crown, pinched hips, pinched shoulders, a shoulder dip, and a less than pleasing top line. I contacted the breeder who then refused to take him back or refund the money. Needless to say this buck was put down because no pet home deserves his aggression. Beware that if you don't have a lot of experience, a nice junior can morph into a pet quality animal in a few months. Don't spend a lot of money on juniors especially since there is no way to guarantee how they will turn out.

2. YOU DON'T HAVE TO SETTLE FOR LOCAL!
I didn't know this for the first 4 years of raising rabbits but you do not have to settle for local rabbits. If you love a breed but don't have the quality you want in your state, there are awesome people that you can pay to transport your rabbits for you. These people generally charge $15-$50 per rabbit which is so much better than shipping by plane. Much safer for the bunnies and yourself!

3. LIVE BY THE 5 RULE!
I have often been told of the 5 rule. Many well-known breeders refer to the 5 rule. Remember that it takes 5 years to produce consistently winning stock. It takes 5 years of raising quality before you are on the big breeders' heels. It takes a minimum of 5 rabbits to get a good start to any breed. Etc. It's the 5 rule!

4. BROOD DOES ARE VALUABLE!
This one may seem obvious to some and not so obvious to others. Lets say I have $150 to spend on new does. If I were offered a nice show doe for $150 or 2 brood does for $75, I'd take the brood does. Not because they are cheaper and I get two does instead of one, but because I know in the long run, the brood does will produce many gorgeous show babies if bred to a good buck. While the show doe will be sitting on the show table or possibly raising a decent litter or two per year, the brood does will be raising awesome litters of show babies throughout the whole year making themselves more valuable.

I will be doing these every once in a while as I think of them. If you have any questions you'd like me to address in a blog post, email me! :) Also I apologize for the lack of pictures. Blogger is being a pain. Lol!

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Cleaning and Ventilation

Among one of the most important steps to a successful rabbitry, a good cleaning and ventilation plan. In this post, I'll show how I keep my barn clean and ventilated. Obviously every rabbitry is going to have to do this a little different since we all have different set ups. If you're building a bunny barn soon, you should plan for a lot of air flow to avoid ammonia build-up. If you're like me and you had to move your rabbitry into an already existing building, things get a little more complicated. Haha!

This is the barn before I started...

Take the dirty trays out...ick...

Dump the trays in the garbage can, making sure
to scrape the newspaper off into the garbage.

Add a fresh layer or newspaper!

Sweep the floor...
And there's a clean barn! :D (for the most part, Lol!)

 One last thing that is not rabbit related. My brother was in an accident this afternoon and broke his back. He will be going into surgery in 10 minutes. He may never walk again. :'( Please say a prayer for him. I may not be posting much for a while.