What Rabbits Do You Have? Show Off Your Rabbits Here!

Coolest Rabbit Breed Out Of These?

  • Holland Lop

    Votes: 108 21.3%
  • English Spot

    Votes: 14 2.8%
  • American Fuzzy Lop

    Votes: 11 2.2%
  • Mini Rex/Rex

    Votes: 107 21.1%
  • New Zealand

    Votes: 95 18.7%
  • Polish

    Votes: 13 2.6%
  • English Lop

    Votes: 33 6.5%
  • Mini Satins/Satins

    Votes: 14 2.8%
  • Lionhead

    Votes: 112 22.1%

  • Total voters
    507
Keep in mind that sometimes the second "later" litter can cause the FIRST litter to be late (have seen this in photos from other people) causing those kits to grow too big and be still born, getting stuck in the birth canal, killing the doe. It can and does happen. So it's just unreliable to breed on multiple days and increases the risk beyond that of a normal pregnancy.
 
400
Here are the five that made it. They are 3 days old now:)

What? R u saying they have no mom?
There's 5
 
Last edited:
Loving the baby pics! Very pretty parents too! I might need to find a broken to add they are so adorable.

Determination! She's gonna get that lunch whether mama cooperates!
400


While her siblings rest lol
400
 
Keep in mind that sometimes the second "later" litter can cause the FIRST litter to be late (have seen this in photos from other people) causing those kits to grow too big and be still born, getting stuck in the birth canal, killing the doe. It can and does happen. So it's just unreliable to breed on multiple days and increases the risk beyond that of a normal pregnancy.
Here again, I wonder if there is any proof of cause and effect, or whether someone is assuming that since the doe was late, that the second litter somehow caused it? As in, has someone deliberately created this situation under controlled (laboratory) conditions and this was the result? I can see that her hormones could be all mixed up with two different pregnancies going on, but has anyone actually studied it?

I have many times seen does carry well past their due date when they are carrying just a few babies. When that is the case, the babies are usually HUGE when they are born, and they almost never survive (I have occasionally helped does deliver such oversized babies). I have also seen babies of widely different sizes born to the same doe; this seems to happen more to older does (once again, breeding on only one day).

When I first got into rabbits, everyone "knew" that the cause of wry neck was an inner ear infection; that's what every rabbit-wise veterinarian would have told you, too. Now, we know differently. So I have to wonder how many of the other things that "everybody knows" about rabbits won't pass the scrutiny of scientific proof, which is why I ask.

But while I agree that there is some risk here, I'm not going to bash someone who decides to try colony breeding "because they are callously risking the lives of their does" as I have seen some do. I accept that multiple pregnancies can happen, but I don't know how common they are. All I can say is that it hasn't happened with any rabbit that I have owned.

Mentioning things that I haven't any experience with, there is someone on BYH that has a rabbit that:

bred in early June
did NOT kindle in July
kindled 6 in mid-August, NOT rebred
kindled 8 in late September, NOT rebred
kindled 1 in late October
Bred early December
kindled 8 early January, NOT rebred
kindled 8 early February

Ain't that fun!
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom