I have a very small urban yard and am attempting to utilize that space in the best possible way in order to grow as much of my own food as possible and live cleanly and sustainably. I currently have 6 hens that live in a two-story coop attached to an approx. 7x10ish (5.5ft tall) run. The run is completely inclosed. The ground is dirt.
I am considering trying my hand at raising meat rabbits as they are one of the few options that I have not tried yet that can happily exist under my current space constraints. I have never had a rabbit before so I am hoping to learn from your experience. I am thinking of starting off with two Californian does and 1 male. I would ideally like the two does to spend most of their time with my hens so that they could also share the run space and get to move around rather than be in a cage on wire all the time. I would only introduce adult rabbits to the hens, not young bunnies as I know chickens are often not kind.
I am thinking about building two rabbit hutches separate from the coop. One that would house the male and the second for breeding and raising baby bunnies. I would also build a rabbit house onto the run for the does to live when they are not currently mothers. Ideally this would access the run but would be their safe place to get away from the chickens and where they would sleep and eat. This could either be in the bottom story of what is currently chicken coop or on the far side of the run. Would they rather be off the ground with a ramp or stay low?
My concerns:
- The meat rabbits are rather large and I have 2 bantam hens so I do not think I can actually make a hole that allows rabbits in and keeps chickens out. Is this a big issue?
- Will the male be lonely? Can he live with another boy or will they fight?
- I know rabbits dig but how well? My run has one row of pavers under it to keep the chickens from digging out (my bantam cochin is very good at this) will this be enough or not even close? I check on the animals every morning and most evenings but I do work long hours and want them to be safe and not tunneling their way to my neighbors golden retriever.
- I am feeding my hens an organic, soy-fee grower mash that is 20% protein (shrimp meal and fish meal). Grit and calcium (oyster shell) are separate from the feed. Will the rabbits want to eat any of this and if so how bad is that? I have read conflicting information - some people say they will be interested in it and others not. I am considering fermenting this feed. Worse in this situation? Better? Doesn't matter?
- I am currently growing fodder for my birds. It is a mix of barley and wheat with a little BOSS thrown in. I am thinking this will also be a nice treat for the rabbits. Is there a sprouting mix that might be better for both?
- Any recommendations on rabbit food? Could this work? http://www.azurestandard.com/shop/product/13444/
- What else should I be concerned about?
I would really love your feedback to hear about your successes or failures on keeping chickens and rabbits together or any tips you might have for a meat rabbit noob.
Thank you!!
I am considering trying my hand at raising meat rabbits as they are one of the few options that I have not tried yet that can happily exist under my current space constraints. I have never had a rabbit before so I am hoping to learn from your experience. I am thinking of starting off with two Californian does and 1 male. I would ideally like the two does to spend most of their time with my hens so that they could also share the run space and get to move around rather than be in a cage on wire all the time. I would only introduce adult rabbits to the hens, not young bunnies as I know chickens are often not kind.
I am thinking about building two rabbit hutches separate from the coop. One that would house the male and the second for breeding and raising baby bunnies. I would also build a rabbit house onto the run for the does to live when they are not currently mothers. Ideally this would access the run but would be their safe place to get away from the chickens and where they would sleep and eat. This could either be in the bottom story of what is currently chicken coop or on the far side of the run. Would they rather be off the ground with a ramp or stay low?
My concerns:
- The meat rabbits are rather large and I have 2 bantam hens so I do not think I can actually make a hole that allows rabbits in and keeps chickens out. Is this a big issue?
- Will the male be lonely? Can he live with another boy or will they fight?
- I know rabbits dig but how well? My run has one row of pavers under it to keep the chickens from digging out (my bantam cochin is very good at this) will this be enough or not even close? I check on the animals every morning and most evenings but I do work long hours and want them to be safe and not tunneling their way to my neighbors golden retriever.
- I am feeding my hens an organic, soy-fee grower mash that is 20% protein (shrimp meal and fish meal). Grit and calcium (oyster shell) are separate from the feed. Will the rabbits want to eat any of this and if so how bad is that? I have read conflicting information - some people say they will be interested in it and others not. I am considering fermenting this feed. Worse in this situation? Better? Doesn't matter?
- I am currently growing fodder for my birds. It is a mix of barley and wheat with a little BOSS thrown in. I am thinking this will also be a nice treat for the rabbits. Is there a sprouting mix that might be better for both?
- Any recommendations on rabbit food? Could this work? http://www.azurestandard.com/shop/product/13444/
- What else should I be concerned about?
I would really love your feedback to hear about your successes or failures on keeping chickens and rabbits together or any tips you might have for a meat rabbit noob.
Thank you!!
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