I would not do anything to upset the mother rabbit with newborn baby rabbits. You can successfully move them when they are about 2 weeks old. that is true but i moved newborn rabbits in to her cage as she was giveing birth on the shed floor i scooped up the fur and babys and put them in her cage its a case of only if you have to move them other wise dont they all grew up by the way all 5 of them,
Sure, just do it calmly and quietly, Do not have a lot of noise: dogs, children, etc. around. Provide fresh feed and water and maybe a treat or two to give Mama a chance to get used to the idea.
I have baby rabbits to =] well first it takes bout 4-5 weeks before you can touch them =] after the 4-5 weeks then move them into a bigger cage make sure shes not pregnate again!
My hamster is moving all her babys out of her bed
When do newborn babie mice begain to move and eat
yes as long as the mom is moved with them cause they need her milk. And if you touch them she will not take care of them.... thank you love, roc royal girlfriend
some rabbits do get under pressured when there is people watching them. some times it is better to turn your back on them or leave them in a cage together for the day and night ( if one of the animals share a cage then move that animal into another cage ) also if you took your rabbits inside then let them mate when you was not in the room that might also help, i am breeding my rabbits so i know how annoying it is when they don't get pregnant first time. good luck xx
A misunderstanding. That's not how breathing actually works. Your rib cage is all but immobile.
Guinea pigs need space to move around in, and some hamster cages are pretty small. Ideally a guinea pig needs at least 0.75 sq. m. If your pet seems like it does not like its cage, get a bigger cage soon
in out in out
Once the babies are born, allow the mother at least 3 days alone with them, without being disturbed. This allows mum to become familiar with the babies. Then, providing mum doesn't mind you coming near the babies, you should move all the babies & the entire nest into a new cage at once. Make sure to place some old bedding in the new cage, so as to lessen the chances mum will reject the babies.
Yes, unless you want the other rabbits to kill the babies when theyre born. EVERY RABBIT needs it's own cage after it reaches 4 months of age, so this should not be a question - whether to separate a pregnant doe from the rest of the herd.
It doesn't
The guy that I got my Chinchilla from said " Once you put the cage in a spot shouldn't move it. But don't move it to much or it can could get sick and die.