I know I have not made the corralation as to why they do better on the Manna rabbit grains unless its the higher fiber content?
I also know its down right scarey to say the least, when my friends went through this it seemed to skip some rabbits hit hard some of the others then turn around and whack the ones that got missed in the first go round.
I wonder also if by chance some of the grain got damp enough to grow a mold? and could be the reason for the skips?
I know its down right frustrating but the common factor in all this is the blockages, bloat and near instant death, seems to be feed related
Why it happens in spring fall and summer and the one in the winter really has me stymied. seems it would follow a normal weather pattern but it doesnt.
What I also dont understand and for a year have been trying to figure it out , not everyone has the problem. not every breed of rabbit. Susan and Andrew it was french lops and flemish, Nicole was french lops and hollands, Shannon with Satins and Americans.
other people have been californians and like yours the Chinchilla breeds. so not any one breed of rabbit.
seems the only sure factor comes in when there is a grain switch over.
I had shannon do her reg brand of feed against another brand of grain , the ones on the newer grain did fine no problemms, the ones on the reg feed were still dying.
I know you switch them over properly a little at a time over the course of a week or more. so it cant be a sudden switch doing it. Neither did the others whose rabbits died in the same manner.
I dont know I dont get it. but untill its resolved I think I woould stick with a grain that has not produced problems for me.
I have heard Kent is a good feed but the fiber content is lower, Unfortunately we cant get it here so I cant do a trial of bunnys to see if the same thing would happen.
This years hay and grass crops have me terrified to be honest, the North East has been under constant water, any hay that was cut is bound to have mold growing in it. I would be very careful feeding hays, and likely some grains right now.