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"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
I still cannot figure out why more people don't raise Giant Chinchilla Rabbits.
Buy Our Book! Food Web: Concept - Raising Food the Right Way. Learn make more food with less inputs
Off Grid Homesteading - latest updates and projects from our off grid homestead
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
BlueDog wrote:
Besides some plants for us I would like to fill up the yard with food for rabbits. I would like to go for higher protien plants as well as greens. The faster growing the better.
Secondly, every single rabbit website has a different list of what is safe and what is not. There is one terrific site I like to refer to but even there they have a list of safe plants that is contradicted my a link they provide to a list of unsafe!
So, is anyone up for starting our own? Based only on foods we have actually used. Any notes you have, like safe except for berries or in moderation would be helpful.
I can start with :
Carrots and tops, radishes and tops, celery stalks and leaves, bananas with peal (be sure to wash peel) in moderation, apples (seeds contain some cyanide but I have found you don't have to worry if you pets get a couple here and there), Pears. Herbs like parsley, cilantro, basil and thyme.
If I could get feedback on this particular list that would be great. It's just a starting point of foods I think are generally thought of as safe but would love to hear what you think.
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
My hutches are 36"W x 30"D x 20"H all made from 2x4 lumber and extra heavy welded wire screening. I have been considering making at least 1 "weaning" hutch that will be 48 x 30 x 20 because 10 - 7lb kits and an 18lb. "Mom" can be a "crowding" experience for them.SaybianTv wrote:
Dave your point's are turning me onto the giant breed's I see what your saying, I'm on the brink of starting up just got to build a greenhouse for them on top of the carport. I do have a question about space, I have limited space. I'm going to be running a partial colony rabbit system, male's to the frindge of society women and children get the playground. I was reading up on the giants and they advise 8 x 5 which I'm happy with, I can't see myself running a cage system but I do have a limit on space, 14 long by 17 wide, giving the women 12x 6 and the men, well 3x6 cell block's along the opposite side. My issue is this is my first animal I'll be taking a bite out of and I'm just not that stoic yet about eating animal's at puberty. My way of fighting the poor economics's is by hussling free food as you do to balance the economy. A minimal input's 6 pounder when Im hungry sound's the smartest, but I know somebody is going to end up with a name and eat me into the red. Was spacing an issue for you as it is for my ethic's? I'm willing to back off yield's if a few more hops of space for a smaller breed really make's for a happier life. I'm not really convinced happyness has to do with running around, but at the startup phase I'm prone to "Pet Based" literature rather than Meat Meat MEAT advice. How large of an enclosure did you allot? for those few who made it past your fork and started eating you out of house?
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
If I had the space for a colony system I would but my rabbits seem to be content. They are always excited to see me even when it isn't feeding time. I wonder if your "greenhouse will present cleaning problems. Mine is set up so I have one empty cage so I can more one rabbit, clean the cage and move them back etc. I have 4 cages and 3 rabbits. You only need 1 Buck too. It has been my experience that putting Bucks together crates instant war. Also, my system is two tiered. I have a hutch that is 2 cages high and 2 cages long. The Buck "lives" down stairs. He does not get to see the Does except when I put them in his cage for a "visit." Rabbits are very territorial, especially the Bucks. They spray like crazy so they need to be in an easily cleaned place.SaybianTv wrote:
Dave your point's are turning me onto the giant breed's I see what your saying, I'm on the brink of starting up just got to build a greenhouse for them on top of the carport. I do have a question about space, I have limited space. I'm going to be running a partial colony rabbit system, male's to the frindge of society women and children get the playground. I was reading up on the giants and they advise 8 x 5 which I'm happy with, I can't see myself running a cage system but I do have a limit on space, 14 long by 17 wide, giving the women 12x 6 and the men, well 3x6 cell block's along the opposite side. My issue is this is my first animal I'll be taking a bite out of and I'm just not that stoic yet about eating animal's at puberty. My way of fighting the poor economics's is by hussling free food as you do to balance the economy. A minimal input's 6 pounder when Im hungry sound's the smartest, but I know somebody is going to end up with a name and eat me into the red. Was spacing an issue for you as it is for my ethic's? I'm willing to back off yield's if a few more hops of space for a smaller breed really make's for a happier life. I'm not really convinced happyness has to do with running around, but at the startup phase I'm prone to "Pet Based" literature rather than Meat Meat MEAT advice. How large of an enclosure did you allot? for those few who made it past your fork and started eating you out of house?
"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"
"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"
Most wood chippers have "hammers" but they are not free swinging. They work more like a really coarse rasp. A true hammermill has free swinging "hammers" and is less likely to clog. Mine seems to work well. I do get an occasional lump but not that often.SaybianTv wrote:
What is the difference between and hammermill and a woodchipper/shredder? Is it the top feed? I saw that site and the video that comes with, the only reason i didn't build one is I couldn't find any other video's of people who have built one other than the people selling the book. I noticed when I feed the chipper wet material nothing comes out nothing comes out, then all of a sudden a green turd in the shape of the exit shoot slowly comes out like baby's first poop. I had hoped a hammermill would help me bypass this effect. In the PNW nothing stay's dry, it's june 29th and my yard still has mud 4 inches deep. I had to break up 20 soaking wet bale's of partialy decomposed hay to make a compost heap and my back almost supernova'd.
Sway me man, tell me a graphic artist with no male influences can build a hammermill and pelletize his own animal feed. I want to rise to the occasion but I always fear american's have access to product's, "lil things" that make DIY a whole lot simpler. It took me 2 year's to find quick couplings for irrigation pipes, and every diy e-book has been a sham and I feel ripped of 15 minutes after buying it. Did you follow those specific plant's or is magic dave short for handyman? I'm not handy I just bleed all over my project's and they miraculously get done "never level"
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
SaybianTv wrote:
What is the difference between and hammermill and a woodchipper/shredder? Is it the top feed? I saw that site and the video that comes with, the only reason i didn't build one is I couldn't find any other video's of people who have built one other than the people selling the book. I noticed when I feed the chipper wet material nothing comes out nothing comes out, then all of a sudden a green turd in the shape of the exit shoot slowly comes out like baby's first poop. I had hoped a hammermill would help me bypass this effect. In the PNW nothing stay's dry, it's june 29th and my yard still has mud 4 inches deep. I had to break up 20 soaking wet bale's of partialy decomposed hay to make a compost heap and my back almost supernova'd.
Sway me man, tell me a graphic artist with no male influences can build a hammermill and pelletize his own animal feed. I want to rise to the occasion but I always fear american's have access to product's, "lil things" that make DIY a whole lot simpler. It took me 2 year's to find quick couplings for irrigation pipes, and every diy e-book has been a sham and I feel ripped of 15 minutes after buying it. Did you follow those specific plant's or is magic dave short for handyman? I'm not handy I just bleed all over my project's and they miraculously get done "never level"
"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"
SaybianTv wrote:
Ah free swinging makes the difference, well crumbs I'm going to have to by that ebook. Are you going to send me the info on the hope pellet making part? or do you have your own pelletizer? The one's that don't need a forklift to move seem to one some pretty minced matterial. But I can't see a viable way of raising rabbit's or ducks for that matter without some way of storing and stabilizing their food. Between post I just want out to the back to grab 20 slugs, some comfrey, lions and salmon berry in the rain. Those slug's are making me work for it these days, I use to get 50 in 5 minutes not it's twenty plus wet pant's and deep bush to find them. I dunno how one could pelletize those sod's but their my only meat source of protein for animal feed at the moment. I don't have free wood anymore, so itle be a home depot mission, if I can just sort out this spraying behavior I really think i could get opperational. I really like the "human" convenience of those cages but I'm bad with door's and hindges. If I didn't build a roof into my enclosure how high can the giant breed's jump. I've seen competition rabit's do a 4 foot wall, but the giants? this will help allot if there to big to do any escaping, right now it would be the deal maker if they didn't jump at all.
It seem's like family of 3 human stomachs, 3 dog stomachs, could get by one 1 man and two ladies? 2-3 litter's each per year. I'm finding it hard to guess because I'm reading 11 rabbit's from a litter all success, to 3 and 5 died. It seems until you gain some experience there's no way of knowing if you've gone to large or too small. You take em at 6 pounds, but if I grew them out in the summer on free feed, I could end up with 18 pounds of meat per? That's worth building a rabbit tractor if it wasn't for the buttercups. Are they any bit like ducks? do they know what is and what aint good eating if left to pasture. I know in a cage id probably eat a shoe if it was given to me, but can I trust them on pasture?
"When there is no life in the soil it is just dirt."
"MagicDave"
SaybianTv wrote:
what did you think of that illustration of the box with the imaginary food successfully growing on top of it? if I droped one of those off at your place would you use it or stick to the cages? And do you have any answer about the jumping ability of the giant breeds? I really feel like at least getting the structure going today if possible, I'm starting to think working in the poring rain is my thing. Not enough sunny days to get anything done. Heavy mesh is impossible to find, the stuff I got for the greenhouse was from an industrial lot, and I had to walk a quarter mile with a roll on my shoulder back to my car as cross country 18 wheeler's drove past me. chicken wire home depot has, 1/2 inch bendy wire they got heavy anything they dont, and the once great feed supply store's round her mainly focus on brushes for horses.
"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"
"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"
"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"
"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"
You would be much easier to understand if you took that bucket off of your head. And that goes for the tiny ad too!
Heat your home with the twigs that naturally fall of the trees in your yard
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