Showing posts with label New Zealands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Zealands. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Part 4: Getting Started in Rabbits – Breeding



Breeding can be one of the most rewarding things about raising rabbits, second to showing, of course.  This activity helps you get to know your lines and really understand the breed you are raising.  Before putting the pair together, you must understand not only the process of breeding and raising litters, but also how to pair rabbits properly so you achieve superior quality in the offspring.  

Get to know your breeding stock.  I cannot stress this enough.  You have to know what each individual rabbit excels in and lacks at the same time.  Reviewing your breed’s standard will help you understand the breed more.  If you have a rabbit with lower shoulders, for example, you should try to pair it with a rabbit with good shoulders so you can work towards having offspring that have better shoulders.  If you have a doe that is amazing in all ways except you would like to see more density, pair her with a superior buck.  Work your way towards better offspring.  When retaining kits, be strict about what you will be keeping.  Do any of the offspring have superior type or wool quality than the parents?   How was the overall vigor of the kits?  Did they make good gains on their feed?  These and many more factors must be considered when keeping babies for your breeding program.  

Once you have picked out your pair, you must calculate when to breed.  A rabbit on average has a 31 day gestation period.  After the doe kindles, the kits are raised on her for approximately 6 weeks, then grown until 8 weeks of age before allowing them to leave the rabbitry.  While not all rabbitries wait until 8 weeks of age to sell kits, many do.  Waiting the extra two weeks post weaning will allow you to re-evaluate the overall quality of the animal.  You would be surprised how differently some will mature with the extra few weeks.  This extra time also allows the babies to get a better, healthier start in life, without the stress of being removed from their mothers and then sent off to reside elsewhere.  

If you have a specific time in mind for the kits to be mature, you can use that day and count backwards.  For example, if you want to aim for 12 week old kits for showing end of September/beginning of October, you can mark that day on your calendar and begin counting backwards.  Because there are about 4 weeks in a month, you can estimate that the kits will be born beginning of July, so you must breed beginning of June to meet this deadline.  

Once you have calculated the birth day and approximate sales/showing point, you can proceed to breed.  The doe should be taken to the buck’s cage for him to breed her.  This is because does especially are notorious for being cage territorial and often will not allow the buck to breed her if he is in her cage.  If you have a trouble doe who won’t allow a buck to be bred, there are a few things you can do.  One is to put the buck in a cage beside the doe’s.  Another trick breeders will do is switch cages – put the doe in the buck’s home and the buck in the doe’s.  The reasoning behind both of these methods is that the scent of the other rabbit will become more familiar to the pair, in which case they will accept each other and breed.  You will know that the buck truly bred her if he falls off all of the sudden. 
 
Age of mature bucks and does is dependent not only on the breed you raise but also the individual rabbit.  The smaller breeds generally will mature earlier than the larger.  It is not uncommon for a dwarf or Lionhead to become mature at 4-6 months of age, both bucks and does.  Just because the rabbit is sexually mature does not mean it is always a good option to breed.  The rabbits will get larger if allowed to mature before breeding.  It almost seems that breeding a rabbit before it reaches it senior weight slows its growth and delays it as it is putting its energy towards feeding its young and not getting bigger.  

After the doe is bred she can return to her cage.  I always aim for at least two breedings in one day, but you can do more especially if you are unsure if he bred her.  Some breeders even breed two days, several times a day.  Once the breeding period is over, mark down what day you bred her, and count 31 days later.  This is her estimated kindle period.  Because a rabbit can have a gestation period of 28-32 or so days, she receives a nestbox on the 28th day on the chance she kindles early.  The nesting box should be of decent size according to breed.  It can be filled with a variety of substrates, with hay and straw being common materials. 
On the day of kindling, the doe will pluck her fur from her chest and belly and line it in her box.  It is especially important to maintain a silent atmosphere on the day she is due as rabbits get nervous and stressed easily and may kill their litter if there is too much chaos going on.  While many breeders advise not to go in and handle babies or view them, I have never had an issue with this.  I make an effort to handle my rabbits all the time so that they not only are easier to handle, but they also maintain your trust.  Check the nestbox to make sure the little ones look healthy and have full bellies, and remove any uneaten placenta and dead kits.   Be sure to wait a half hour to hour or so after kindling to make sure the doe has finished cleaning and feeding the kits as well as gave birth to all of them.  

Now all you have to do is monitor the growing family!  Check the kits periodically over the course of their growth in the nestbox and make sure they are all eating well and maturing nicely.  Feed the mother a high quality food and always provide her with an unlimited supply of fresh water.  The doe may need more food than she normally gets as she is nursing her litter.  The babies’ eyes will open at 10 days and they may begin exploring.  Be sure to occasionally change out their bedding to make sure they stay in good health.   

Once the kits reach 3-4 weeks of age they will begin hopping out of the nestbox and exploring.   When all the kits are spending most of their time outside of their nesting box, you can remove it from the cage.  Have a dish low enough for the babies to nibble on pellets, and be sure to train them on a water bottle or dish if they are not beginning to sample water.  

Continue watching them grow.  Keep records of their growth rates, vitality, the mother’s mothering abilities, etc.  If there is anything you find unusual about the litter, be sure to note that too.  

At 6 weeks it is usually easier to check the sex of the kits.  If you were planning on advertising having kits for sale, you may want to get the word out at this point, but wait the extra two weeks before letting them go to their new homes.  There are plenty of free advertising sites online you can use.  Advertising on the bulletin board in feed stores is also a good way to find new customers.  Continue evaluating their potential according to breed standards.  

At 8 weeks you can begin letting them go to new homes; however, if you wanted to wait longer, there is no harm in that.  Hopefully by this time you would have been able to observe and evaluate the offspring enough to know what you may like to retain for your program.  Be sure to have plenty of free cage space at this point to hold growing litters and retained babies.  Sometimes it takes a while to move the litters out so you want to be sure to have ample space for them if it takes a while. 

Next week will be our last post of this series!  I will give a brief overview of the show world and showing your rabbits.  Even if you were not planning on showing your rabbits, this post should help give you an idea of what is involved in showing your stock and the rewards of showing.  



Friday, January 31, 2014

Meet Gladys


Last weekend I obtained a gorgeous New Zealand White doe at the State 4H Rabbit and Cavy Show.  As I mentioned in the previous post, I had gotten out of New Zealands due to my tight school schedule.  After giving it some thought I realized how much I have grown to love the breed and made the decision to become involved in them yet again.  Since I want to be able to juggle my college schedule with the rabbits I am going to attempt to stick to a breeding pair.  Of course, we all know how easy it is to stay small especially when your nestbox is filled with show prospects but in the meantime I am going to attempt to. 



So, this resulted in acquiring my beautiful doe, whom I named Gladys.  Gladys is very nicely typed doe with a wide set, deep body and built like a brick.  Her full sibling received Best Opposite 6 Class at the show so between this and her promising lineage I have great hopes for her. 

I do not currently have a purebred buck to breed her to so I have held back on breeding her.  I plan on attending the state convention and hopefully will be bringing home a nice buck to compliment her.  My plans are to breed her and my French Angora doe Galaxy on the same day beginning of May and hopefully both will take and kindle for me.  Both girls will be first timers but considering the two come from nice maternal lineage I have hopes that the girls will be excellent mothers. 

Once I acquire my New Zealand buck I will be posting her and her mate on the website but for now I am limiting her to the blog.  Please continue visiting our website and blog to see the progress of the rabbits!  I will keep everyone updated! 

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Wanted: New Breeding Stock!

It is not often that I go out and seek others rabbits, as I tend to work with what I have, so here is an opportunity to anyone who has what I am looking for!  I am looking for the following rabbits: 

FRENCH ANGORAS-

Chocolate buck, chocolate doe, broken patterned buck or doe, red buck or doe, lilac buck or doe, or sable pearl or smoke pearl buck.  Prefer that these rabbits have a tort parent if possible, except for a smoke pearl or sable-pearl.  Rabbits must be show quality, have minimal faults, and be pedigreed.  Prefer seniors over juniors but would consider juniors.   

SATINS-

Black, chocolate, lilac buck.  Senior or intermediate prefered.  Must be show quality and pedigreed.  Prefer if black carries chocolate.  

NEW ZEALANDS-

White or red bucks and does.  Prefer seniors or almost seniors.  Rabbits must be show quality and pedigreed.  Want reds with intense and brilliant red color and very nice body type.  Want whites with very nice body type. 

If you have what I am looking for please send me an email.  I plan on attending the MSRBA Fall Convention this November so I would be able to pick them up there.  I will be looking at several breeders rabbits but would be happy to see what you have to offer. 

Have a great week! 

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Updates!

Our new group on Ravelry, Blossom Acres Farm and Rabbitry, is very successful.  It was put up a little while ago and has almost 20 members!  If you are interested in joining and hearing the latest feed please view our last post with info on joining.  Below is a banner of our group! 



I did want to mention - our phone is currently broken so if anyone has any inquiries please send us an email finnishfiberfarm@gmail.com.  We apologize for this inconvenience but we are in the process of fixing it! 

I recently received my grand champion legs for Blossom Acres' White Out.  She now has 3 GC Legs!  I will be clipping her down soon and breeding her.  Hopefully she will make many more grand champions! 

We are expecting new Lionhead kits and will be breeding our French Angoras shortly.  We are still trying to get our Satins bred but so far are unsuccessful. 

We will have some Lionheads for sale soon, as well as a few remaining New Zealands.  If you are interested, please visit our website and send us an email. 

We currently have 1 skein of handspun alpaca yarn for sale.  It is single ply, worsted weight, in the colors of green with a touch of blue and yellow.  Approximate weight:  2 ounces.  $15.  Below is a picture. 



http://www.blossomacresrabbitry.webs.com/

Thursday, July 12, 2012

In the Rabbitry

Well, I have just sold the last of my French Angora juniors that I had for sale.  They all went to wonderful homes.  It will be quite a while until I have more French Angoras for sale.  I do have around 12 head now so I am planning on cutting back some of my stock and replace some of my seniors with my up and coming juniors.  Here is a sneak peek at what I will have available for sale:

1 Sr. Blue Proven French Angora Buck
1 Sr. Proven Ruby Eyed White French Angora Doe
1 Sr. Proven Red/Orange Doe (will be for sale as wooler)

I will have some very nice prejunior New Zealands available for purchase as well.  I have 2 litters of babies right now.  My partially pedigreed litter will be for sale at 10 weeks, and my fully pedigreed, younger litter will be for sale at 8 weeks.  All of our does are spoken for but we will hae plenty of nice, purebred bucks available for purchase.  I wil also be selling 2 of my proven seniors for sale soon.  I have babies out of them and I am trying to move into pedigreed stock so I will be letting them go.  I will have 1 unpedigreed proven purebred New Zealand White doe and one fully pedigreed proven, purebred New Zealand White buck.  So, if they are something you might be interested in, please send me an email and ask to go on my waiting list OR  you could just wait until they are for sale. 

We have a bunch of Lionhead does bred right now, so we are expecting quite a few babies.  We are also expecting French Angora babies and will be breeding our New Zealands and Satins this end of July-August.  We are very excited about the Satins, as they will be our first Satin litters! 

As for current sale rabbits- all we have left is Spot, a broken black Satin doe.  She is a nice tempered girl.  I am selling her as a pet for $15.  If anyone is interested in her please call or email me. 

We just ordered a bunch more cages.  Unfortunately, these cages are for the rabbits that we had retained, so there isn't much expansion going on.  This just gave us the flexibilty to move rabbits around and give them more room.  I am not sure I wold really want to expand- I would like around 4 New Zealands and maybe 5 Satins, but that is in addition to my 12 or so French Angoras.  Feed isn't cheap, either.  I am also going to be going to college soon so I am not about to double the size of my herd.  I am hoping to be able to keep the vast majority of my stock during this time.  If I had too, I would be willing to part with my Satins, but even that would be hard.  Time will tell. 

I guess that wraps up everything! 

(517) 589-5888
finnishfiberfarm@gmail.com
http://blossomacresrabbitry.webs.com

Monday, January 2, 2012

Rabbitry Update

We have had some new happenings here at Blossom Acres.  We have decided to sell out of our Californians in order to better focus on our other breeds.  We currently have 2 rabbits for sale- a doe and a buck.  I am charging $30 for the buck and $40 for the doe.  Both are proven and come with pedigrees.  More information can be seen on our website:  blossomacresrabbitry.webs.com. 

Recently we bred Tracey, our New Zealand White doe to Baby Boy, our NZW buck.  This was his first time breeding so we will have to see how everything turns out!  Baby Boy to Tracey is a very nice breeding, so I am expecting some promising rabbits in the litter.  If Tracey takes, these kits will be available for sale around March 18th.  They will be available with partial pedigrees- they will just be missing two generations on the mom’s side.   

We have had several nice litters from Wee One’s Cocoa and Blossom Acres’ Frostbite.  These kits were born December 27th and December 29th.  We are also expecting a litter from Blossom Acres’ Little White Lie on the 11th of January.  These kits should be available for purchase beginning of March to mid March 2012.   All of the show and brood quality Lionheads will come with 3 generation pedigrees.  We are expecting black, blue, blue tort, black tort, REW, and shaded kits born, and will hopefully have some nice blue and blue-tort babies available for sale.  Some of these Lionhead kits will be chocolate carriers!!!       

The French Angoras are going well too.  I am expecting a litter mid January from Blossom Acres Lily of the Valley who is bred to Circle 6’s Fredrick.  Lily is one of my favorite does in the rabbitry- she has VERY good type and a lovely, dense fleece.  This breeding should produce some outstanding purebred kits with HUGE potential.  It will also be second generation of Blossom Acres!!!  This is going to be Lily’s first litter!  Farfelu’s Missy is also due with a litter a little later than her daughter; she too is bred to Fredrick.  All of these kits will come with 3 generation pedigrees and will be available for purchase beginning to mid March.  Once I finish showing some of my other seniors, I will be breeding them to Fredrick. 

Here are some pictures of Tangerine I got in full fleece:




I will update everyone as things happen.