If you are referring to pellets as feed, they look like solid small green cylinders. They are compressed alfalfa less than an inch long and no more than a 16th inch diameter.
If you are referring to their excrement, it looks like deer or goat's pooh - like a little black bead, about the size of a pea.
ARE U KIDDING ME MAYBE look it up somewhere else like in a book!
They look like a mound of ashen grey rabbit droppings, The pile may contain 16-20 cylindricle pellets. They are dry, and powdery.
Timothy hay, & rabbit pellets.
no!
This rabbit will eat the same thing any rabbit eats. Alfalfa pellets and most vegetables and lettuce. Fiberous fruits like apples and pears.
No, it will get indigestion. Rabbit pellets are much better
Doesn't this depend on the weight of your Rabbit? It should say on the packaging it does for my dog! :)
Yes.
Chinchillas need to be fed a high quality pellet and some of those high quality pellets are indeed rabbit pellets.. such as.. Purina Rabbit show, Nutrina Naturewise and Manna Pro. Just remember not all rabbit foods are safe for chinchillas to eat. Qualty chinchilla pellets are: the kline diet, tradition, mazuri, oxbow and some ranchers have their own formula.
Yes safe!
Rabbits eat vegetables, rabbit pellets, and Monty Python's Knights of the Round Table.
Between the ages of 7 and 12 months, the rabbit should slowly transition to an adult diet. When switching pellets, always do so gradually: start by mixing a bit of the new pellets in with the old pellets, and every week increase how many new pellets you're including until there's more new pellets than old pellets, and eventually you'll only be feeding the new pellets. Sudden changes in a rabbit's diet -- even if it's a good change -- can make the rabbit ill. When you're making dietary changes, be extra vigilant looking out for signs of ill health and bring the rabbit to the vet if you see any. See the related questions below for more information and helpful links.