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The subject of intentional breeding or meat rabbits is prohibited. The answers provided on this board are for general guideline purposes only. The information is not intended to diagnose or treat your pet.  It is your responsibility to assess the information being given and seek professional advice/second opinion from your veterinarian and/or qualified behaviorist.

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Forum DIET & CARE Cut hay question

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    • caudex
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      104 posts Send Private Message

        So I know that uncut hay is best for their digestive systems, full stop. Last week, boyfriend very thoughtfully picked up hay for them while he was out. (not a total slave yet, Liam is working on him by flopping on him though. )

         

        Me: Thank you! Oh, it’s cut up small.

        Boyfriend: Yeah, I know, but the only other hay I saw was for horses.

        Me: What was the difference?

        Boyfriend: It was really long. I thought it was too big for them.

         

        Best intentions, and the bag would only last them a week, so I decided to run it out. They mostly waste their hay anyway, no matter how little pellets I give them.

        Get up the next morning… All eaten. Down to the little fuzzy dust bits. Same thing when I get home from work. It’s been this way all week. Every time I refresh it, they pounce and nom it down. They’re getting plenty of greens, so they aren’t starving, and normally they munch a little and let the rest build up until I change the litterbox.

        In short, I know short lengths aren’t as good… but they are eating SO MUCH MORE of it. Their hay intake has easily tripled, and they leave their 1/4″ cup of pellets for most of the day. Does that offset the disadvantage?


      • Sarita
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        18851 posts Send Private Message

          I’m not entirely sure anymore that length is important – maybe for chewing purposes (teeth), but not for diet purposes. It has more to do with the fiber content, I think than the length.

           Hopefully someone will know if it’s really that important…


        • Kokaneeandkahlua
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          12067 posts Send Private Message

            Oh I’m sure the short hay is totally fine-I’ve never heard any concern about shorter hay. If they are eating it like that,. I would make that my main hay


          • peppypoo
            Participant
            1945 posts Send Private Message

              I highly doubt length is important. if you think about it, the hay gets chewed up and digested anyways. The only thing I can imagine is that the length might be some kind of indication of hay quality…maybe bad quality cheap hay is just bits and pieces and will have shorter strands?

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          Forum DIET & CARE Cut hay question