I have been thinking about it and planning, researching for about a year or so now. I have learned it is completely doable to feed natural to meat rabbits, many are/have done it for many, many generations of rabbits successfully.
If you do it this way the best way is to find rabbits already fed a natural diet, but if you can't introduce slowly and thoughtfully.
Provide mineral source.
Not just grass or garden veggies, but leaves from trees and shrubs are good source, weeds and the like, many many sources we don't often think about.
Growing fodder from seed grain is a great way to feed through the winter and still avoid the pellets.
Comfrey is an awesome food for chickens and rabbits
In my area my biggest obstacle is going to be the long hot summers. Rabbits can take lots and lots of cold but can't take heat. Many poor countries are going to home meat rabbits (in hot climates and very little money for electricity) and they do it by creative underground housing. That is what is taking me this long, getting my ducks in a row for a creative, cheap, underground housing.
That is what I can think of off the top of my head.
This is GREAT...for those who wish to raise rabbits in this way. Entirely too much work for me to do with rabbits, considering what I go through to feed my chickens.
My hat is off to anyone who wants to try pulling this off feeding their rabbits this way!
Not surprisingly I found a thread on feeding more natural feeds on our sister site, BYHs and also a great thread on feeding all natural, including fermented feeds, on another forum for rabbits:
http://rabbittalk.com/natural-feeding-for-rabbits-f11.html
http://rabbittalk.com/fermented-foods-okay-for-rabbits-t11124.html
http://www.backyardherds.com/threads/alternative-rabbit-food.21346/page-2
One person pointed out that Mannapro rabbit feed has several ferment sourced probios listed on the ingredients, so you are not too far off in asking about FF for rabbits! Who knew? Now we know!
I love it when folks ask these kinds of questions and we find out something new.I'll be giving these threads a good read and also researching the dietary habits of wild rabbits in my own state. Wild rabbits are hardy and produce healthy litters without the use of formulated feeds, so if we can provide a natural diet and then augment it some with more minerals they should produce well also and stay just as healthy. Of course, with any kind of program towards improving health and natural hardiness, those animals that cannot produce and thrive well on it should be a natural cull.![]()
Of course if you see it on the internet...it must be true...

I used the 'expensive rabbits' because of their amazing meat to bone ratio and the fact that crossing them to NZ's gives a hybrid that is almost as good in those departments without worry about bottle-necking the FW breeding stock. Anyone who knows anything about rabbits knows that feeding youngsters leafy greens or even succulent grass in tantamount to feeding a human infant a box of EXLAX.

GO FOR IT !
