

#TINY BUNNY POOP FULL#
For a full list of detailed rules, please see our rules page.Posts that do not follow our rules may be removed without warning. Please allow time for moderators to review and approve the queue throughout the day. r/Rabbits also has a very strict spam and troll filter. Please review the rules below for banned topics before posting.Rehoming posts are welcome, but please read through our guide first.For breed ID posts, please include the rabbit's age, weight, and full-body pictures of their profile in good day-time lighting.

This will help other rabbitors tailor advice appropriate to your situation. For behavior problems, please include the rabbit's age, how long you have had the rabbit, when the behavior occurred, and if/when it was neutered.If you have found a wild rabbit, please see here for proper next steps and resources.
#TINY BUNNY POOP PROFESSIONAL#
We can only give suggestions that are not a replacement for professional advice.See here for resources if you are in need of financial assistance for your pet.See Veterinary Emergencies for other common symptoms of problems in rabbits.If your rabbit has not eaten or used the litter box in the past 12 hours, visit an emergency hospital or make an urgent appointment immediately. Posts about clearly urgent health issues that require professional care will be removed. If your rabbit has shown any serious medical concerns, please see a rabbit-savvy vet first before posting.All happy pix * Advice and help requests.Submit your rabbit veterinary bills here!.If you're really interested in learning more about bunny poop, a good article (with photos!) is available here.Welcome to /r/rabbits, an open community where users can learn, share cute pictures, or ask questions about rabbits! Please note that we are a pet rabbit subreddit that discourages breeding and encourages rescue. You can see Boomer and Cricket in one of their boxes with barely an inch to spare! Most bunnies here also seem to find their box to be a convenient place for a nap or a snuggle-session. The bunnies will munch hay and poop at the same time. I set mine up with a pelleted-wood product for litter and fill it to the brim with hay.

It's the way that most people keep them that makes many think otherwise.Īn important pa rt of training a rabbit to use a litterbox is to set up the box in such a way that a bunny will like to go there. Why she has this peculiar habit I don't know, but she is proof positive that rabbits are "clean" animals. She does the same thing when I'm at work. She "holds it" overnight and will dart out of her cage to the corner litterbox first thing in the morning. My newest bunny Dora has been somewhat difficult in this regard, because she refuses to use the litterboxes that are in her cage. In fact, most rabbits will train themselves to use a box, so long as you put the box where they want it. Many people who haven't encountered a rabbit, outside of a backyard hutch rabbit, are surprised to learn that they can be litter-trained. (Oh gosh, listen to me! - I am not obsessive!) A rabbit that eats a lot of very high-fiber hay, like oat hay, will have beautiful, light-colored flakey pooties. All the way on the left are Dora's pooties - she is not the smallest bunny here, but she is not a good hay eater and it shows in her poops. The pooties on the right are from the Flemmies and are marble-sized. The photo at left shows a sample from each of the five bunnies that live here. It's all about knowing what's *normal* for a particular bunny. If there is a problem, you'll notice your bunnies' pooties getting smaller and smaller. Rabbits need huge amounts of h ay and very little of the other stuff that people like to feed bunnies. Unless a rabbit has a physical problem, oftentimes the cause of less-than-perfect-pooties is a lack of fiber in the diet or too much starch. A rabbit who isn't making nice pooties has a problem and it's up to the owner to figure out why. This isn't because we have too much time on our hands (well, not entirely) but because pooties are an indicator of the health of a rabbit's digestive system. We pay a lot of attention to how much a bunny is *producing* and what the pooties look like. Most housebunny owners are somewhat obsessive about bunny-poop.
