Fifibutton
Wise Old Thumper
My Mona has been leaving her caeceotrophs in the run without eating them.
Just to clarify, the dark brown poo that looks like bunches of grapes are caecetrophs and the bunnies normally eat them short after excretion.
Anyway, every morning when I go to the run, there are always at least 3 separate piles, sometimes squashed into the ground, sometimes intact. I have tried various cures: Avipro Plus, taken her off pellets and given her hay tea.
She currently has lice (gettng panomec every 10 days), lives with a highly anxious partner and has just finished a course of pennicillin (for syphilis) which she'd been recieving from December.
She eats and plays and poos as normal.Yet this has been ongoing for over a month now. What I don't know is if she is producing too much caeceotroph to eat or she has cut them out of her diet altogether. Also she is 6 years old, spayed and very feisty. I don't know if its maybe inherant with age.
Does anybody with a better knowledge of bunnie poo have any suggestions?
Thanks
Just to clarify, the dark brown poo that looks like bunches of grapes are caecetrophs and the bunnies normally eat them short after excretion.
Anyway, every morning when I go to the run, there are always at least 3 separate piles, sometimes squashed into the ground, sometimes intact. I have tried various cures: Avipro Plus, taken her off pellets and given her hay tea.
She currently has lice (gettng panomec every 10 days), lives with a highly anxious partner and has just finished a course of pennicillin (for syphilis) which she'd been recieving from December.
She eats and plays and poos as normal.Yet this has been ongoing for over a month now. What I don't know is if she is producing too much caeceotroph to eat or she has cut them out of her diet altogether. Also she is 6 years old, spayed and very feisty. I don't know if its maybe inherant with age.
Does anybody with a better knowledge of bunnie poo have any suggestions?
Thanks