Wondering what to feed your bunny?
A proper diet is important to the health of your bunny.
Fresh water should always be available.
~Pellets~
The main diet of your rabbit should be rabbit pellets. Rabbits can also be fed certain vegetables, and hay. The most common recommended amount of pellet to be fed daily is 1 ounce per 1 pound of rabbit. If your rabbit weighs 4 pounds, then it should receive 4 ounces of rabbit pellets. Bunnies up to 4 months old should be fed as much as they will eat. Good quality pellet should be 16% to 18% protein, and at least 16% fiber. Rabbit pellet can spoil or get mold on it, both can cause illness in your rabbit. Try to only buy enough pellets to feed your rabbits for about a month and keep it in an airtight container.
Fresh water should always be available.
~Hay~
Hay should also be a regular part of your rabbits diet. Hay helps reduce hairballs and blockages in the intestines which can kill your rabbit. The most preferable type of hay is timothy hay. It provides the best fiber and lowest levels of calcium. Alfalfa hay is higher in calcium and protein and lower in fiber. Alfalfa is usually an ingredient in rabbit pellets. Straw can be used, but contains little nutritional value.
Fresh water should always be available.
~Vegetables & Treats~
Rabbits have a sweet tooth. Now I know, we all want to "spoil" our babies, they can be fed several types of treats, but should be limited to small portions two or three times a week. Never feed treats that have been treated with chemical fertilizer or pesticides. Rabbits under 6 months should not be fed any of these items. After 6 months or when trying a new treat watch the rabbits droppings to ensure they stay solid.If the droppings become soft or watery, immediately stop giving the treats.
Did I mention that fresh water should always be available?
it is the single best thing that you can do for the health of your rabbit
Here is a list of items you can and cannot feed your rabbit.
I wrote these down and tucked inside my purse for grocery store trips
Good
- Apples (no seeds)
- Tomatoes
- Peas
- Beans
- Kale
- Carrots
- Carrot Tops
- Mustard Greens
- Dandelion Greens
- Sugar Beets
- Parsnips
- Parsley
- Grapes
- Pears (no seeds)
- Oranges
- Strawberries
- Cherries
- Raspberries
- Blueberries
- Papayas
- Pineapples
- Melons
- Mangoes
- Peaches (no pit)
- Potato Peels
Bad
- Acorns
- Almonds
- Apple Seeds
- Apricot Pits
- Asparagus Fern
- Azalea
- Bleeding Heart
- Carnations
- Cherry Pits
- Clematis
- Creeping Charlie
- Daffodil Bulbs
- Daisy
- Eucalyptus
- Gladiola
- Hyacinth Bulbs
- Iceberg Lettuce
- Iris
- Ivy
- Jack-in-the-Pulpit
- Jonquil
- Lily of the Valley
- Milkweed
- mistletoe
- Mustards
- Nutmeg
- Oak
- Peach Pits
- Pear Seeds
- Peony
- Philodendron
- Plum Pits
- Poinsettia
- Rhododendron
- Rhubarb Leaves
- Skunk Cabbage
- Tomato Leaves
- Tulip Bulbs