Yes. Pine shavings are fine for use as bedding. They are absorbent and clean smelling. Easy to dispose of right into the garden as they make wonderful fertilizer.
For baby chicks only use pine or hardwood shavings, redwood shavings have a natural chemical in them that will make the chicks sick.
At you local farm and feed store - usually anywhere feed stocks and hay, straw, and grain are sold. A large bale of pine shavings is typically $9 to $10 in my area - WA state.
Shavings forks are also known as manure forks and muck forks. These are used to pick through pine shavings or pelleted horse bedding to remove manure and urine. The tines are more closely spaced on a shavings fork than on most pitch forks making them easier and more efficient to use.
The best bedding to use is wood shavings. If the pine is in shaving form then yes, youcan. Never use newspaper as bedding. The ink can be toxic to little pets.
Cockerels have testes yes. They are however located internally and are not ever visible externally except when the bird is butchered.
yes tax
yes
For baby chicks only use pine or hardwood shavings, redwood shavings have a natural chemical in them that will make the chicks sick.
You can put pine shavings on top of soil to make your garden look better in the rain when the soil turns to a brown paste, and when it's sunny, brightens up your garden.
You should not use cat litter, pine shavings, or cedar shavings. It would be better and healthier to get a guinea pig a different bedding.
A small amount of cedar shavings won't harm the bunny, although cedar shavings aren't the best choice for litter. Pine or aspen are better for the rabbit.
no . cedar will kill chicks. stick with pine shavings. Another view Cedar does not kill chickens. As a breeder of rare chickens, I use and have used cedar shavings for many years and have never had a problem. My free range birds roost in aromatic red cedar trees within the fenced property and although I have heard the above answer many times I have yet to see any empirical evidence that the oils released from cedar shaving does anything but make the chicken coop smell fresh and sweet.
No, not recommended. You may see pet stores using cedar or pine shavings as bedding for ferrets. Cedar shavings harbor bacteria and can cause allergies and respiratory problems in ferrets, also pine and other woods produce dust. Wood shavings are completely unnecessary for ferrets, you can use clean towels or old T-shirt for sleeping. Cedar shavings, white and yellow pines, release volatile hydrocarbons which can affect animals. Plicatic acid, a volatile hydrocarbon, results in asthma in humans and rabbits. Other hydrocarbons result in changes in the liver, which may impair its ability to detoxify certain drugs, including various anesthetic agents. Scientists over the years have alluded to possible carcinogenicity in cedar shavings. Absolutely not. Wood shavings are usually made of pine, which is a very dusty wood. If small animals like ferrets, rabbits, etc. come into excessive contact with very dusty materials (such as wood shavings and cat-grade clay litter) this can get into their lungs and dry them up. And that can end up very badly if not caught in time. Short answer: no wood shavings.
yes but you should use pine shavings orcedar to soak the pee up.
Penis shavings is more preferred if i dont say so myself.
Most any shavings, but avoid pine, cedar, and "fluffy" or "soft" bedding. You could even use shredded paper, but no newsprint or "shiny" paper. Really any shavings you could use for a gerbil or hamster.
yes any type of tree shavings are fine but not ones that are thin because the hamster might choke and die ;( (i miss my hamster)