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The author of this book raises rabbits in Texas: http://www.raisingrabbitsebook.com/ I raise a different breed than any she recommends but the information in the book is sound. I think it is a very good reference guide.perdurabo wrote:
We live on a ~30 acre farm in Central Texas about 40 miles SE of Austin. We just started raising rabbits this year and we had a great plan of having the hutch out in the garden where their droppings will be readily accessible for composting into our raised beds and we can keep worm beds under the hutch for rabbit dropping vermicompost. We hoped to breed the rabbits for meat as well as use their droppings for our large garden. We built a very nice wood and wire 20' long hutch divided into six ~30"x30" wire floor cages with a high corrugated metal roof and long eaves.
I started with 2 Californian does and a Californian buck since those seem to be the most popular rabbits to raise around here. We got them in January and they seemed to do just fine over the winter but our buck wasn't fully sexually mature until early April. Once his testicles descended we went ahead and bred one of our does to him. The pregnancy took and everything seemed to go to plan with the birth of the kits according to what I read in the Storey's guide to rabbits... I put one of those sheet metal nesting boxes in with some straw in it and she padded it all with her fur. Six kits were born and all of them seemed to do just fine for awhile. Then in mid may the temperatures started reaching into the 90s and on one particular day when it got in the upper 90s every last one of the kits died.
I then noticed that the adult rabbits would stretch out in their cages and pant so i tried putting those blue ice freezy packs in with them during the day, but those melted too fast to be of much help. I tried to rig up one of those cheap mister systems from tractor supply to keep them cool, but that doesnt seem to do much but keep them damp. We are in the midst of a terrible drought down here and so far this year we have had 12 days over 100 degrees and haven't had any measurable rain for over 30 days. I'm at my wits end as to how we can possibly raise these rabbits down here with it so hot. I've heard it suggested that you bring pregnant does and kits inside where the A/C is running until the kits are old enough, but I my wife insists that they will be smelly and will get pee and poop all over the floor so she wont have anything to do with that (yes, I know they make cages with pans to catch pee and poo, but she thinks they will still make the house stink somehow).
Out in the garden we have running water but no A/C electricity out there so fans are not an option (plus running a fan outdoors seems pointless). We jury rigged a frame to hang shade cloth OVER the roof of the hutch, but even that seems like it doesn't help much when its 102 degrees in the shade and 80% humidity. Are there other ways of keeping bunnies cool outside that doesnt require 100v AC power? I thought about something solar powered, but in order to run a fan that blows enough air to cool the rabbits with solar, it would take $1000 worth of solar panels. I could have a whole new 200amp service pole dropped there for that price.
How do other people raise their rabbits in the south? Do they raise them inside buildings in suspended or stacked cages and then scoop the poop out of the catch pans every day by hand? Half the purpose of raising rabbits was to have an easily accessible self-filling pile of bunny manure at the ready for the garden. Moving it into the barn which is nearly 250 yards away from the garden would require not only re-tooling new hutches for inside, but running A/C or fans in the barn, and then manually cleaning and hauling out the poop every day. Thats a lot of expense/work for a few $10 rabbits.
Once again, we're on our 12th day of 100+ degree temps and 35 days with zero rain and no relief in sight. Im getting near my wits end here on how to keep these critters alive while not spending more money on them then they will ever be worth.
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
circles, cycles, phases, and stages
Buy Our Book! Food Web: Concept - Raising Food the Right Way. Learn make more food with less inputs
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Phil Causey wrote:The reply posted about using underground space intrigued me. I have a 40 ft shipping container buried underground as a storm shelter and yes the temperature does stay much cooler in there but there is limited ventilation. Has anyone tried using underground space for rabbits such as this during the hottest times of the year?
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perdurabo wrote:
The author of this book raises rabbits in Texas: http://www.raisingrabbitsebook.com/ I raise a different breed than any she recommends but the information in the book is sound. I think it is a very good reference guide.
Michael Kalbow wrote:
perdurabo wrote:
The author of this book raises rabbits in Texas: http://www.raisingrabbitsebook.com/ I raise a different breed than any she recommends but the information in the book is sound. I think it is a very good reference guide.
I'd like to check out this book, but the link is dead. Any idea on where I can get the same info?
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