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Our rabbits won’t eat hay....advice please

MaxAndMolly

Young Bun
Our previous rabbits, Max and Molly, showed very little interest in hay. We tried different varieties, different places to put it, reducing pellets etc, but nothing made any difference. Luckily they spent a lot of time running free-range in the garden, so they ate plenty of grass and leaves etc, and a small amount of hay, but it still worried us a bit. Anyway, Max and Molly sadly went to rabbit heaven recently :cry: and we now have a new pair of rescue rabbits. When we brought Teddy and Taylor home from their foster carer a week ago, we put them into their hutch and they immediately settled down to munch on some hay. The droppings they produced were a beautiful golden brown, rather than the very dark ones Max and Molly produced. It was a relief to have rabbits that happily ate hay. A week on, and their hay consumption has definitely reduced. I put bundles of it into their hutch morning and evening, and hours later, most of it is untouched. We’re giving them the same hay (Timothy hay) that they’re used to, and that they ate so much of at their foster carer’s. Some of their droppings are golden brown, but a lot of them are now dark brown. We think Taylor is eating more hay than Teddy, but it’s hard to tell for certain.

I bought a hay rack yesterday, stuffed it with hay, and it’s completely untouched. I’ve also scattered bundles of it around the hutch and run, and they are eating some of it, but not enough, I think. As I say, their droppings are dark.

We’ve reduced the amount of pellets and green stuff we give them. They have free run of the garden for several hours a day, so are eating grass etc, and are very happy and healthy. It just bothers me though because I know rabbits should eat lots of hay, but ours never want it. It’s baffling.

Should we be concerned? If they’re happy, healthy, eating grass and some hay, should I still be worrying about the colour of their droppings?!
 
How many pellets are you giving them each day? It could still be that they are getting too many and therefore are not hungry enough to munch on hay.

However, it sounds as though it it is likely that they are consuming lots of grass, which is just as beneficial to the rabbits, but will result in darker droppings. If this is the case you will probably find that when there is insufficient grass to eat in the garden they will return to eating lots of hay and then the colour of their droppings will also change.

I would not be concerned purely because of the colour of their droppings, as long as the droppings are still large.
 
Our previous rabbits, Max and Molly, showed very little interest in hay. We tried different varieties, different places to put it, reducing pellets etc, but nothing made any difference. Luckily they spent a lot of time running free-range in the garden, so they ate plenty of grass and leaves etc, and a small amount of hay, but it still worried us a bit. Anyway, Max and Molly sadly went to rabbit heaven recently :cry: and we now have a new pair of rescue rabbits. When we brought Teddy and Taylor home from their foster carer a week ago, we put them into their hutch and they immediately settled down to munch on some hay. The droppings they produced were a beautiful golden brown, rather than the very dark ones Max and Molly produced. It was a relief to have rabbits that happily ate hay. A week on, and their hay consumption has definitely reduced. I put bundles of it into their hutch morning and evening, and hours later, most of it is untouched. We’re giving them the same hay (Timothy hay) that they’re used to, and that they ate so much of at their foster carer’s. Some of their droppings are golden brown, but a lot of them are now dark brown. We think Taylor is eating more hay than Teddy, but it’s hard to tell for certain.

I bought a hay rack yesterday, stuffed it with hay, and it’s completely untouched. I’ve also scattered bundles of it around the hutch and run, and they are eating some of it, but not enough, I think. As I say, their droppings are dark.

We’ve reduced the amount of pellets and green stuff we give them. They have free run of the garden for several hours a day, so are eating grass etc, and are very happy and healthy. It just bothers me though because I know rabbits should eat lots of hay, but ours never want it. It’s baffling.

Should we be concerned? If they’re happy, healthy, eating grass and some hay, should I still be worrying about the colour of their droppings?!


Are they eating lots of fresh grass in the garden? That makes droppings significantly darker. But that's not a worry.

It's perhaps because they have more to interest them now they are at your place, whereas I find rabbits who are in a restricted place eat loads of hay because there's nothing much else to do!

They may love their fresh grass more than the hay!

Have you tried them on Readigrass? (Freeze dried grass - just as good as hay for teeth and digestion)
 
Really helpful replies, thank you. We’re giving them about two eggcup’s worth of pellets between them a day. I didn’t know droppings would be darker if they eat mainly grass - that would explain why Max and Molly’s were so dark then. And also why Teddy and Taylor produced light brown droppings at first, before we let them loose in the garden, but are now producing dark ones. It all makes sense now! Their droppings are nice and big, so no concerns there.

We tried Max and Molly on readigrass but they weren’t interested. I’ll try Teddy and Taylor on it though.
 
It sounds like they are eating a good amount of grass and if their droppings are still nice and large there’s nothing to worry about.

You could try them on different hay, is the Timothy hay exactly the same from the same supplier as they were having previously?

My rabbit has become a bit of a hay connoisseur since he needed a dental a few months ago. He went off the baled meadow hay I was feeding him on, and wouldn’t eat it even after the dental. He also wouldn’t eat it from the hay rack anymore :roll: so I ended up getting samples from different places. I feed him a few different varieties at a time. And I feed him them in little troughs - aka extra long loaf tins I bought in the charity shop. I find he eats a lot more hay than he did before feeding him better quality hay, and there’s less waste too.
 
Really helpful replies, thank you. We’re giving them about two eggcup’s worth of pellets between them a day. I didn’t know droppings would be darker if they eat mainly grass - that would explain why Max and Molly’s were so dark then. And also why Teddy and Taylor produced light brown droppings at first, before we let them loose in the garden, but are now producing dark ones. It all makes sense now! Their droppings are nice and big, so no concerns there.

We tried Max and Molly on readigrass but they weren’t interested. I’ll try Teddy and Taylor on it though.


You're welcome :)

I would find, unless your rabbits are *really* big, that two eggcups is too much for two bunnies. I give one small eggcup for three bunnies, but then I am a meanie :lol: Often people give one eggcup between two medium sized bunnies.

I know you've tried reducing pellets, but it may make a difference in the longer term :)
 
You're welcome :)

I would find, unless your rabbits are *really* big, that two eggcups is too much for two bunnies. I give one small eggcup for three bunnies, but then I am a meanie :lol: Often people give one eggcup between two medium sized bunnies.

I know you've tried reducing pellets, but it may make a difference in the longer term :)

Ah, that’s interesting. I thought one eggcup full per rabbit was the recommended amount. We used to give Max and Molly a little bit more than that because they LOVED pellets. We’re being stricter with these two! Taylor is medium sized, but Teddy is a big rabbit. Apparently a Dutch, but the biggest Dutch I’ve ever seen! He’s also a bit overweight, so it probably wouldn’t hurt to reduce their pellet allowance further.
 
Ah, that’s interesting. I thought one eggcup full per rabbit was the recommended amount. We used to give Max and Molly a little bit more than that because they LOVED pellets. We’re being stricter with these two! Taylor is medium sized, but Teddy is a big rabbit. Apparently a Dutch, but the biggest Dutch I’ve ever seen! He’s also a bit overweight, so it probably wouldn’t hurt to reduce their pellet allowance further.
I give a table spoon of pellets a day between two large buns... I'm a super mean owner [emoji38]

Sent from my HTC U11 using Tapatalk
 
I got this from another rabbit website: Many healthy rabbits will turn up their noses at hay because they are offered excessive amounts of pelleted food. Is this helpful?:) Hope it was.
 
yeah - I would cut down on the pellet or make them work for it. mine sometimes get it in bowls, sometimes a treat ball, or sometimes thrown all over their pen. its then not dinner on a shining platter so they have no interest in hay. mine get two tablespoons thrown around their pen usually :) one per rabbit or they start to fight.

adding forage to their hay can help too.

I am not sure if they have 24/7 outside access, but I know some people don't even give rabbits hay as they have 24/7 garden access, the grass is their main source of fibre. they're also full on the nommy grass. while hay is important, grass is just as beneficial.

grass also varies, in the winter its less nutritious, in the spring its very rich.

RE poops - many believe golden poops are the be all and end all, they're not. often unless rabbits are on a hay only diet, their poops are darker due to the richness of the food they eat. grass, forage & veggies all account to this. as long as they're not tiny, runny, strung together you have a good thing going.

I think as long as they are doing well and no dental issues present then it should be okay. still offer the hay as a backup, but they may be full on the grass.
 
I got this from another rabbit website: Many healthy rabbits will turn up their noses at hay because they are offered excessive amounts of pelleted food. Is this helpful?:) Hope it was.


Hi there and welcome to the Forum :wave:

I agree with you :)

You just have to be sure there are no lurking dental issues that prevent a rabbit from chewing up the hay.
 
Thanks everyone. I’ll stop worrying then. Teddy has spent most of today sunbathing. I discovered that if I put a pile of hay right under his nose, so he can eat it without having to get up, he’ll eat it. So I guess he’s just lazy :lol: Several times today I’ve crept up on them to spy on them, and I have spotted them eating hay. Maybe I was just expecting them to have bigger appetites than they do. Although when I let them loose on the lawn they go mad for all the grass, leaves and shrubs as though they are half-starved :roll: I think it’s probably partly that, as Mighty Max suggested, all they’ve ever known is sitting in a small hutch eating hay, so they’d rather play/laze about in sunshine/eat grass now they can.

I will reduce their pellet rations again but honestly, it’s not as though we’re feeding them bucketloads of them :lol: They normally have 2-3 tablespoons of pellets between them. I’ll reduce it to 1-2.
 
One of my buns was ill recently, and the recommended diet we were given (for 2 8 month old boys) was unlimited hay and water, and egg cup each of pellets a day (high quality Timothy hay ones, not rubbish) and a hand full of mixed greens in the morning and at night. One of my boys is allowed NOTHING else (he has a sensitive stomach), the other can have the occasional natural treat like fruit, wood or other natural nibble. Having nearly watched a bunny die, I am sticking to this and not allowing anything else.
 
Thanks everyone. I’ll stop worrying then. Teddy has spent most of today sunbathing. I discovered that if I put a pile of hay right under his nose, so he can eat it without having to get up, he’ll eat it. So I guess he’s just lazy :lol: Several times today I’ve crept up on them to spy on them, and I have spotted them eating hay. Maybe I was just expecting them to have bigger appetites than they do. Although when I let them loose on the lawn they go mad for all the grass, leaves and shrubs as though they are half-starved :roll: I think it’s probably partly that, as Mighty Max suggested, all they’ve ever known is sitting in a small hutch eating hay, so they’d rather play/laze about in sunshine/eat grass now they can.

I will reduce their pellet rations again but honestly, it’s not as though we’re feeding them bucketloads of them :lol: They normally have 2-3 tablespoons of pellets between them. I’ll reduce it to 1-2.


You can always sneak in a few extra pellets as 'treats'. I do that sometimes - they come hopping onto my knee :)

At least you know they have good choppers for hay chewing now you've seen them do it!
 
One of my buns was ill recently, and the recommended diet we were given (for 2 8 month old boys) was unlimited hay and water, and egg cup each of pellets a day (high quality Timothy hay ones, not rubbish) and a hand full of mixed greens in the morning and at night. One of my boys is allowed NOTHING else (he has a sensitive stomach), the other can have the occasional natural treat like fruit, wood or other natural nibble. Having nearly watched a bunny die, I am sticking to this and not allowing anything else.
Thanks, that’s exactly what we’re doing :thumb:
 
I am so glad your buns are ok, they might get sniffy for a while at the change but they will soon get it! My boys as it turns out are fussy eaters but in a very good way. They will turn their noses up at posh Marks and Spencers bagged salads at £2 a pop, but will DEVOUR a Tesco own brand cheapy Fresh Greens cabbage for 60p. Suits me!
 
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