Your mom --by winegart-- It is called kindling.
It's called kindling.
Yes! The buck should be out of the does cage right away. Even if they are bonded the male shouldn't be in the same cage. You can put a cage beside the does and put the male in there so the can see each other but not be together.
When your doe gives birth, your kits can be wean after it was 8 weeks old. And that is the time that you can rebreed her again but you must first check if the doe is fully recovered from the last kindling. You can see if your doe is fully recovered if she is healthy, eating well, etc. Check also if her poop is normal(rounded poop, if it is not, do not rebreed her). And when your done doing those things, you can rebreed her and wait until the 29th-32nd day(gestation period) and she will give birth again.
With a doe tag, yes.
I did, one time have a Californian rabbit that gave birth to one huge baby 4 days late. It had fur because rabbits start to get fur at 3 days of age. As far as the size of a 19 day old, I am afraid that a baby that large would kill the doe during kindling.
Samuel Kenyon Doe's wife was named Jewel Doe. She was an influential figure during his presidency in Liberia, which lasted from 1980 until his overthrow in 1990. Jewel Doe was involved in various social and charitable activities throughout her husband's time in office.
Some does do become very aggressive in the later stages of pregnancy and especially when kindling time closes in. It is not uncommon for a doe to "go for you", lunge, growl, thump its feet, etc. while building her nest and even once her litter is kindled. It is instinct to protect her litter.
A doe usually has one or two fawns at a time. Triplets are uncommon, but are not unknown to happen.
They have one at a time.
The Doe's (females) will eat continually, generally at night. Bucks will eat at night, but during the rut (breeding period - roughly November), they will forgo food and begin to chase Doe's. A buck will loose a substantial portion of it's body mass during this period.
No.