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First Answer: If you were to go to the store and get full grown cabbages and carrots WITH the greens on top and half bury each in a sort of garden, and maybe spinach too, the rabbits would think its natural and dig them up them selves. Make sure the fake garden is not that close to your house, because they get kind of scared near humans if they are wild. Here is a list of foods they might or might not eat depending on their taste: Carrots, Cabbage, Lettuce, Spinach, Eggplant, Zucchini, Squash, Broccoli (sometimes), and Okra (sometimes). Have fun and please make sure they are all full grown foods, to feed them full!

More Details: Dark leafy greens are good for rabbits, but other than that, vegetables aren't really part of a rabbit's natural diet and too much can make them sick. Most of the vegetables mentioned above are fine as a treat only.

Good dark-coloured leafy greens include:

  • lettuces (like romaine, Boston, and chicories - like escarole, endive, frisee, radicchio)
  • spinach
  • carrot tops
  • beet tops/chard
  • dandelion
  • fresh herbs (like basil, mint, thyme, cilantro)

Cruciferous greens (like cabbage, broccoli leaves, kale, radish tops, turnip tops, collards) should be limited because they can cause gas (which can be deadly in rabbits).

Other things you can feed rabbits in your yard include flowers, weeds, and garden plants:

  • Bramble leaves
  • Borage
  • Butterbur
  • Chickweed
  • Comfrey
  • Coltsfoot
  • Cow parsnip
  • Dock
  • Goosegrass
  • Goutweed
  • Hawkweed
  • Heather
  • Hedge parsley
  • Knotgrass
  • Lemon balm
  • Lovage
  • Marjoram
  • Nipplewort
  • Plantain
  • Rosemary
  • Salad burnet
  • Savory
  • Shepherd's purse
  • Tarragon
  • Thistle
  • Yarrow
  • Flowers:
  • Aster Camomile Caraway Dandelion Day lilies Galega Geranium Geum Hibiscus Hollyhock Honesty Hyssop Jasmine Lavender Lilac Marguerite Marigold Nasturtiums Pansies Roses Sunflower Wallflower
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13y ago

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