Well, in the first place, pellets aren't all that good for rabbits. Hay should be their main food and should be available all the time to the rabbit. Rabbits must not eat wheat, but a little bit of oats should be okay, but give it as a treat.
Mix your quaker oats. Mix: making laws for religion and allowing it all toghether. Quakers: thought that everyone was equal Oats: wheat (oats) was the main source of income
No vitamin loss
Type your answer here... dutch rabbits
They're made from coloured pellets. Most of the pellets are white - with a small proportion of coloured pellets mixed in. When the mixture is melted in the forming machine - all the pellets simply melt and mix together.
It depends what chocolate powder you're using. One that definiitely IS gluten-free is Nesquik, and one that is definitely NOT is Milo. However, you can just check the ingredients on the packet. Anything with wheat (apart from wheat glucose syrup), malt, barley, rye, or oats is out of bounds.
It would be hazel hamster tasty mix and oxbo pellets (only give a little bit of these pellets because hamsters need a variety of food and give 1½-3 tablespoons of hazel hamster tasty mix.
No. The OATs and glycol ratings are different - not recommended
According to the website of Freedom Foods, who make 'wheat free oats':"...all oats do contain gluten, but it's not that simple. See, oats naturally contain a type of gluten called Avenin that is different to the type of gluten you find in wheat, rye, barley and triticale.Now if you talk to the Coeliac Society of Australia, they say about 4 in 5 people with Coeliac Disease can tolerate oats. We say the easiest thing to do is read the Coeliac Society position statement on oats and seek medical advice on whether this applies to you."The safety of oats for patients with celiac disease depends on the variety of oat - some are more toxic than others. The method used to assess this can be applied to other foods to determine their toxicity as well.Oats do not contain gluten, the problem is most oats are cut on the same mill as other grains that do. Unless it states gluten free on the oatmeal or regular cut oats stay away.
If your turtle is not eating and you are giving him food pellets and fruit mix it may be due to hibernation. It also may be due to your turtle not feeling well.
mix carrots and apples chopped finely, mix it with oats, molasses, and chef yeast. ;)
Try soaking your pellets/flakes in bloodworm juice or mix the two before feeding.
You HAVE to eat gluten free if you have an intolerance to wheat.