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- Newsgroups: rec.pets
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!sdd.hp.com!col.hp.com!news.dtc.hp.com!srgenprp!almanb
- From: almanb@sr.hp.com (Bob Alman)
- Subject: Re: Purina Rabbit Chow and wood-chip litter (was Re: bunny questions)
- Sender: news@srgenprp.sr.hp.com (placeholder for future)
- Message-ID: <C039G4.Fnx@srgenprp.sr.hp.com>
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 20:12:03 GMT
- References: <1992Dec29.032651.20345@ee.ubc.ca>
- Organization: HP Sonoma County (SRSD/MWTD/MID)
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1.4 PL6]
- Lines: 83
-
- John Paul Morrison (jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca) wrote:
- : In article <23014@drutx.ATT.COM> njl@drutx.ATT.COM (LaRocheNJ) writes:
- : >In article <1992Dec24.091133.958@ee.ubc.ca>, jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca (John Paul Morrison) writes:
- : >
- : >> ...We use a paper based litter,
- : >> instead of regular cat litter. The paper/pulp has no dust and is soft; if
- : >> we use regular cat litter, the rabbit feels like chalk if you pick him up.
- : >
- : >You're referring to clay litter and I wholeheartedly agree with you.
- : >
- : I think the bunny agrees too. He sort of cringes when we have to use clay
- : litter ('cause the other stuff ran out, and we can't get to a store until
- : a weekday).
- :
- : The dust is just awful. The clay cat litter isn't meant to be lived in
- : (cats just crap in the litter box, but they don't live in the litter box.
- : While bunnies spend a fair bit of time in their cages)
-
- We have used all kinds of litter from clay to paper as well as corncob and have
- settled on usually plain unscented low dust clay litter. We have gotten around
- the dust problem by using a mat made from uneaten hay. The buns can sit on the
- mat of hay and do their job as well as dig in the corner when they want to. The
- mat keeps them off the litter and filters out he pills as well. This also
- extends the life of the litter. The hay can be replaced once or twice. The one
- drawback is the smell of the hay. We are lucky to have a barn where we keep the
- buns ( their room is carpeted for play ) so a little hay smell is ok. Hay might
- be replaced by straw which should have a less obnoxious odor.
-
- On the subject of hay; our buns have had alot of hay available ( I am pretty
- sure it is oat hay ) and it seems they prefer eating the green part of the hay
- more than their pellets. I know the pellets supply vitamins so I use a vitamin
- supplement in their water. They have never had any evidence of bowel problems
- and are lean and quick. I feel comfortable with this, but are their any hidden
- problems with this sort of diet. The rabbit food contains mostly pellets with
- a small amount of fun stuff: dried bananas raw peanuts carrot chips and
- sunflower seeds. I usually take out most of the fun stuff and use it for
- "bribery" to attract then and get them to settle down. These guys will do
- *ANYTHING* for one peanut!
-
- Cutest bunny pose I have ever seen:
- Roll bun on his back in your lap. With both thumbs rub his cheeks. Ours will
- pull their front paws to their mouths and their ears stick straight out. These
- guys look like they're in heaven! The are totally gone to the point where we
- clip their nails and they don't even seem to notice! Their hind paws come up
- to their face. Its also a great way to check out their teeth by pulling their
- lips a little. Try it!
-
- Bob....
-
- :
- : I wonder about the dust: do rabbits roll around in dust? He doesn't have
- : any ecto-parasites (ie fleas, mites), but do bunnies have an instinct to
- : roll around in dust?
- :
- : >> (cedar chips are even more expensive, and they are really messy with an
- : >> open wire cage. Cedar doesn't absorb much water either)
- : >
- : >Most of all, cedar chips (in fact, any wood chips) emit phenols that
- : >cause liver damage if the phenols can collect in the air the rabbit
- : >breathes. (I suspect the same is true of hamsters, mice, and all the
- : >other small animals for whom wood chips are sold!)
- :
- : True. It probably isn't as big a concern for hamsters, rats etc. since
- : they have much shorter lifespans than bunnies. I think damage from
- : chemicals would be cumulative, and would be a bigger threat to a long lived
- : animal (just like smoking cigarettes: cancer and stuff only show up
- : after 20+ years of use/exposure. If people only lived 20 years, smoking
- : probably wouldn't be a big deal risk over a lifetime)
- : >
- : >Nancy LaRoche (HRS)
- : >att!drutx!njl
- :
- :
- : --
- : __________________________________________________________________________
- : John Paul Morrison |
- : University of British Columbia, Canada |
- : Electrical Engineering | .sig file without a cause
- : jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca VE7JPM |
- : ________________________________________|_________________________________
-
- --
- Bob Alman 1-707-577-4148 almanb@sr.hp.com
-