Tuesday, 29 August 2017

Palpation - The rabbit scan

In the previous post  I mentioned mating the does on  04/08/17. Today being the third week, I had to palpate the two does early in the morning before leaving home.

The palpation process:

This requires some practice - two or more tries before you can master it. When I was feeling the does abdomen, I wasn't doing it to grab the kits or to count how many there were... that could have endangered the developing kits as well as the does life. I was mindful of the of the amount of pressure I applied and how long.
 
When palpating, the focal point should be the upper side of the abdomen. The pressure applied should be very low most of the time. Move your hand gently up and down from the upper to the lower abdomen while your thump and middle finger are used to prob the abdomen with gentle pressure.
 
Of course, you can feel a lot in the belly. Amongst others, right behind the left ribs you can feel the liver; all the way up in the abdomen on both sides and just under the spine, halfway back you will feel the kidneys. You may also feel the small fecal pellets and the guts. If she is pregnant after two weeks, you will start to feel hard things like marbles, also in the upper side of the abdomen. These become progressively larger until you might even be able to feel the form of an embryo.

It is also possible to check for pregnancy by putting the doe with the buck again 12 days after mating. If she refuses, the first mating has almost certainly worked out well. If she is willing again, the buck can repeat his work. This method has the very small risk that an already pregnant doe gets mated again with the possibility of starting another pregnancy halfway through the first. This super-pregnancy occurs occasionally.

At the end of the end of the palpation the first doe gave a positive sign while the second doe did not.
 
Bingo!... the first doe is already heavy. I could feel the embryos.
 
Meanwhile, I have rescheduled the second doe for mating...

Monday, 28 August 2017

Why rabbits?

An old friend of mine who did not fancy rabbits came visiting my apartment last weekend and was asking me "why rabbits?"

After highlighting to him these five reasons, he has been begging me to sell two females and a male since then...
He is a family man and I am not so I understand his desperate need of these rabbits...
There are a hundred and more reasons why myself chose the rabbit as meat source, but here are five (5) reasons that got my friend speaking bunnish:
 
1. They are cheap
  • It is not expensive to keep them. They can be kept in a relatively small space.
  • Rabbits can eat waste materials, and they are efficient at extracting protein from forage.
  • The rabbit's basic shelter needs are modest. It is fortunate that a variety of locally available building materials used in the construction of simple sheds, hutches, nest boxes, hay racks and feeding and watering equipment are generally abundant in tropical developing countries
  • Suitable shelter for rabbits can be made in an outdoor shed, backyard, veranda or spare room, or a complete hutch (cage with roof and siding) can be constructed. Similarly, accessory equipment, hay racks, nest boxes, salt and feeding and watering containers can be made from a diversity of products, including such refuse items as bottles and tins. Nest boxes made of wood, clay, metal and basket materials are useful for accommodating young litters.
  • They eat almost anything.  Rabbits are herbivores and will consume large quantities of forage (greens), which people do not eat and convert this forage into valuable meat for human consumption. Practically, rabbits can be fed anything from the garden, forest or kitchen including banana and papaya (pawpaw) peels, pineapple cores, corn stalks, weeds, vines from pulses, leaves (cabbage, lettuce, cauliflower, carrots) etc. This indicates that rabbits compete minimally with humans for grains.

2. Products they offer
  • The skin of rabbits is valuable if there is a market for it, possibly in local handicrafts.
  • Meat, Rabbit meat is suitable for special diets, such as those for heart disease patients, diets for the aged, low sodium diets, weight reduction diets, etc.
  • Manure. Rabbit manure is packed with nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, and many minerals, lots of micro-nutrients, plus many other beneficial trace elements such as calcium, magnesium, boron, zinc, manganese, sulfur, copper, and cobalt just to name a few.
  • Blood. Rabbit blood has great value and is being tested for possible blood transfusion in humans. I don’t have much details on this for now, but promise to keep you updated about the market for this and the possibilities in the near future.
 
3. Environment friendliness
  • Their manure does not smell too much.
  • Rabbits are quiet and small,
  • Rabbits do not need force to be restrained.
  • Because they are noiseless, rabbits can be raised in garages and servants' quarters in urban centers without infringing on the peace of the neighbors.
  • You don’t have to pluck them.
4. They are Nutritious
  • Their meat is nutritious. It is lean, high in digestible protein, very low in fat and cholesterol, has good taste and can be prepared in over 300 different ways.
 
 
5. They are prolific
  • Litters (number per birth) are large with short generation intervals. A single doe (female rabbit) can give birth to (litter) up to 40 kits (baby rabbits) in a single year. This means you can start with two mature breeding rabbits (one male, one female) and end up with over 40 rabbits in less than 12 months. That is because rabbits can breed throughout the year and it takes just about a month (30-33 days) for a pregnant doe to produce baby rabbits.
 
To start a raising rabbits one does not need a large initial investment. A few does (females) with a ram or buck (male) is enough to start, once the kindling begins, the herd rapidly increases in size (if done well and with no bad luck) so that very soon one can slaughter the young males.
 
With increased awareness of what makes a healthy diet and the economy in a turmoil, now is a good time to consider raising rabbits. The best way I know to good meat on the table without a large investment is raising rabbits.

Contrary to popular belief, rabbits are not rodents  and do not belong to the rodent family. Rabbits are Largomopha, belonging to the family Lagomorph, which is closely related to horses. Rabbits are livestock, and very good livestock, too, (the cleanest and most disease-free of all).

Friday, 25 August 2017

Garden Affairs

It's one of those rare days when rain went missing in the month of August, the sun shining so bright, the sky so clear and the weather is warm.
 
Lucky day for the rabbits!
 
I am taking them out into the garden for some refreshing air, fresh grass and herbs. But that's not the only reason I am bringing them out... they will also mate, am 100% sure of that, especially when the garden is a neutral ground.
 
A neutral ground is where neither the male or the female has a marked territory. It is not always necessary to have them in a neutral ground for mating to take place. Except in rare cases where the doe (female) is aggressive even when she is placed in the bucks' (male) territory. Another suitable option would be artificial insemination.
 
On this particular day, the doe had all of the buck... + had a really good time in the garden.
 
If both does were not pregnant, I could still use the garden method to have them both conceive. Another way is to take the does separately to the buck on scheduled dates.
 
Artificial insemination would have been more precise but much more expensive and harder. Besides, the rabbits will want it natural I am sure. 
 
By 9:56am I placed both rabbits in the garden. A rabbit tractor was on stand by incase they were destructive.
By 10:06am the buck had done it twice and was still attempting to mount the doe the third time. Now that's precisely what I wanted. That buck rocks!
 
The second doe should have been in the garden too if the palpation on her was negative.

Thursday, 24 August 2017

The butcher table


After just a few weeks, it took me no time in setting up a functional mini meat factory in my apartment. And here I am rolling out a time table for meat production/processing for the year 2018.


Here is the meat production time table:

The butcher table:


The two does will be mated in the month of January and between 28-31 days later the kits are born and the number is recorded. One or two may be lost between the period of birth and weaning. The kits are weaned at 3 months. Fattened for 1 month and slaughtered at 4 months. The number of kits weaned, their total live weight, number butchered and dressed weight are also recorded.
 
The first set of litter will be butchered in May when they are 4 months old.
 
In February, the two does will not mate and will only nurture the January kits and be mated in March. The January kits are then fattened from April to May. At the end of May, the January litter will be butchered and all the necessary figures/data are recorded in the tables above.
 
The circle will be repeated from March to July and from May to September and from July to November i.e. Mating to slaughter. Each of which will take five months.
 
That's just about it! The tables are ready to be filled...
 

Wednesday, 23 August 2017

Meat on the table

In todays short post I will highlight what three rabbits are capable of putting on the table.

Their basic needs are:


- Pellets 50kg [annual consumption] at N8000
- Hay grass 70kg [annual consumption] at N6000
- Feed supplements [annual] at N2000
- Misc. [annual] at N3000

Their reproductive circle is as follows:
A male and two females, with gestation period of 30 days and a litter size of 5-10 kits per birth.



From birth to wean age is 4 months.
Dressed weight of each weaned is approximately 1kg
Total dressed meat per year = 150kg

Meat prices:

Chicken 1kg = N1,250.00                                                       
Beef 1kg = N1,820.00                                                       
Turkey 1kg = N 1,600.00                                                                                                          
Goat per kg = N2,300.00                                                       
Veal 1kg = N1,400.00
Sources: easy shop easy cook, Numbeo, Jumia


Unlike myself, I don't know the quantity and quality of meat you consume annually. If you consume above 100kg, here is a possible estimate of your annual expenditure
Chicken 100kg x N1,250.00 = N125000.00
Beef 100kg x N1,820.00 = N182000.00
Turkey 100kg x N 1,600.00  = N160000.00
Goat 100kg x N2,300.00 = N230000.00
Veal 100kg x N1,400.00 = N140000.00

What the rabbits are offering:

Approximately 150kg dressed white meat devoid of cholesterol and rich in easily digestible protein annually

At what cost?

N19000 annually

Time consumed: 30hrs monthly

Almost too many analysis already. However, these are my targets:
  • Cut down cholesterol and fat levels
  • Cut down feeding cost
  • Cut down belly fat
  • Live a happier and healthy life
  • Get more meat protein by eating more and more meat

What more?

You can easily increase the number of breeding females and multiply the meat yield since they reproduce fast and mature early.

Always remember that there are consequences to the artificial introduction of any chemical into processed foods that nature has not designed.

Don't miss the next episode...


 

Tuesday, 22 August 2017

Is the rabbit pregnant?

During my routine cleaning/sanitation on Saturday I saw my rabbit lying lazily on the floor... I then made a comment on how fat and sluggish she had become. I assume something is wrong with her...
 
"What is it?" "You eat and sleep a lot"
"But am pregnant, can't you see?" the rabbit fired back... I took a very long look again observing her stomach more closely. The last word that tried coming out of my mouth is 'yippee!'before my left hand crashed into  one of the bed post. I woke up and sat on the bed reflecting for a couple of seconds before reaching for my diary. I flipped a few pages, 04/08/17 it was, the day the rabbits next door mated.
 
It's been 2 weeks already and the right time to palpate the rabbits. Certainly not today though, I have got a lot of clients to attend to today. Palpation will have to be tomorrow.
 
Palpation is the process of feeling the rabbits abdomen to check for sure if she is pregnant. There are plenty other ways of knowing if a female rabbit is pregnant. However, palpation remains the surest way to know... 

Saturday, 19 August 2017

The Rabbits Next Door Episode III


How fetish it might sound I don't know. One thing I believe is that you are like the kind of animal you like or keep.
Once, I had this turkey in the backyard. The turkey made me believe that turkey is the dumbest animal on earth.

Animal myths

I believe goat and sheep are stubborn noisy and persistent animals. snail is soft and slow, cattle is large and patient, snake is thin and poisonous, dog is lovely and intelligent, pig is dirty and fatty, duck is noisy and intelligent, chicken is cute, weak and noisy.

Did I just reveal something that could be true or are these just myths

However, this particular turkey was so dumb a turkey. Made too much noise, poo-pooed with very wicked smell and was just too skittish.

One morning I had had it all, that was all I could take. I know the turkey is just an animal with its own special attributes, but... Trust me, I used it to prepare a pot of stew and had a treat later in the evening.

After that evening I began to worry if the meat can make me dumb and skittish... "No! The meat is already down, along with it a glass of good wine and it felt so good." However, that was the last time I stayed close to a turkey.

And now, three rabbits are staying next door...

Everything these rabbits do - in future episodes. Don't miss!