Happy Hopping
Wise Old Thumper
This morning, I notice Goofball's poos is tiny, and there is very little poos. From 4 am or so of this Fri. till now (Fri. 11 pm), she didn't eat her pellets. All she ate is the stem and leaves of the carrot, the stem of 2 piece of spinach, a few bits of raisins.
I force feed her w/ 2 servings of baby food this evening. Since she lives indoor, and the room is clean, and her food is the same everyday, I can't see there is any element that can cause her to get sick. And she's only 1.5 yr. old.
I also notice the sound made by her chewing of the stem of the carrot seems rather loud. It's defnitely louder than usual.
My best guess is her rear teeth is at it again. As her last molar cut was Aug. 10, 2006, so it has been 5 months & 2 days. So happens that the first time a similar non-eating behaviour occurs, my vet & I work the time backwards, it's also about 5 mth. since the growth of her first set of molar., i.e., about March 2006.
There may be a sneak-in appointment tomorrow, but my vet, whose a exotic pet specialist, is fully booked today.
If it is the teeth again, how many percent should my vet cut the teeth before she sand it down? Say about 75% cut off under GA on the molar, and then sand it down?
On the other hand, for an indoor rabbit like Goofball, is there anything else that can cause the above?
I force feed her w/ 2 servings of baby food this evening. Since she lives indoor, and the room is clean, and her food is the same everyday, I can't see there is any element that can cause her to get sick. And she's only 1.5 yr. old.
I also notice the sound made by her chewing of the stem of the carrot seems rather loud. It's defnitely louder than usual.
My best guess is her rear teeth is at it again. As her last molar cut was Aug. 10, 2006, so it has been 5 months & 2 days. So happens that the first time a similar non-eating behaviour occurs, my vet & I work the time backwards, it's also about 5 mth. since the growth of her first set of molar., i.e., about March 2006.
There may be a sneak-in appointment tomorrow, but my vet, whose a exotic pet specialist, is fully booked today.
If it is the teeth again, how many percent should my vet cut the teeth before she sand it down? Say about 75% cut off under GA on the molar, and then sand it down?
On the other hand, for an indoor rabbit like Goofball, is there anything else that can cause the above?