My rabbit kindled and have solitary one stillborn little one...Why?

She was a little late, roughly speaking four or five days to having her litter. She pulled hair and made a nest like majority, but only had one, stillborn, stretched out baby. The nurture is high-protein A&M. This is her first litter. She's a year old in June. If I breed her again, will this happen again? Would I be better rotten not trying again?
Answers:
If the paraphernalia came that late, it could have be because the kit was large. It could own been a lot of things. Each breed had it's own problems next to breeding in kindling. Each also has their own little tricks to overcome some of those problems.

If you have a dwarf, you'll attain peanuts sometimes and they always die. If you have a large head breed, sometimes they have a hard time getting those heads out. Sometimes you get hold of fetal giants (bigger than normal kits). That can be caused be a glorious protein "meat rabbit" feed or something else.

I recently had a doe kindle one regular sized kit but I knew she had more than one tools in there. Two days passed and nothing. I give her some oxytosin and out came a huge, long kit. Sad. I'm glad she delivered it as it be quite long.

I don't know if your rabbit is too young to breed because I do not know the breed you have. In broad, dwarf, small and medium sized rabbits are bred no sooner than 6 months old when the are adults. I have Jersey Wooly rabbits (this breed is a dwarf) and try to breed the does at 6 months unless I am trying to find them their last Grand Champion leg as a senior. For my breed, it is not so good to wait. Waiting till 1 yr dated is pushing it for my breed.

For large/giant breeds or some meat rabbits, it is good to wait longer like 9 months (when THEY are adults) to one year because they develop more slowly than the small breeds.

Raising rabbits can be a good cheer and a heartache as you have probably found. It is up to you if you want to do it again. My advice would be to find a mentor - someone that can help you. That could be a 4H rabbit project person in command or teen leader, an ARBA exhibitor that shows and breeds the same breed as you have, an ARBA decide, etc.

There is a lot of support to be found online and in clubs (they are online, too). I am a member of the American Rabbit Breeders Association (you don't enjoy to breed your rabbit to join). That is a GREAT place to start. I am also a member of my national breed club. Another "must join".

When I joined those clubs, I received the ARBA's Raising Better Rabbits and Cavies, and a free subscription to Domestic Rabbit's magazine. The magazine alone is worth the membership for adjectives it's great articles. I also received the Jersey Wooly handbook from the National Jersey Wooly Rabbit Club (NJWRC). Those three things alone give me tons of info and would be very vaulable to anyone interested surrounded by raising rabbits. Keep in mind that each breed club is different and adjectives might not offer a handbook.

You can always run to a rabbit show near you and talk to exhibitors about their rabbits to attain info and find support. It is a very friendly environment and it is very likely that if you introduce your self as a newby that you'll in the blink of an eye find friends that will be happy to talk your ear off roughly speaking everything rabbits and share their experience with you.

There are also many yahoo groups or forums that you can join. There you can ask adjectives your questions and there are loads of experienced people near to help you. These groups have been awfully helpful to me. I added a link below to a forum that some good friends of mine run (and they are VERY well-mannered breeders, too). I just joined this week and love it. I think you might similar to it, too. Join it and do an introduction of yourself. Everyone is very friendly.

So, without knowing more, I think to be precise the best advice I can give right now. I hope you try joining a accurate online group. Best wishes. Source(s): ARBA member/exhibitor/breeder, 4H rabbit project leader
http://z13.invisionfree.com/RabbitHabbit…
Why worrie next time you mate her she may get it right, but when breeding make sure you use a smaller buck.
Was your buck bigger than the doe? Sometimes this happens since this was her first litter; because the birth canal is not far-reaching enough for the kits to pass through. When we bred our rabbits I try to engineer sure that the buck is smaller than the doe. It could be stress too, make sure there is no trauma in her hold and nothing stressing her out, like a dog or something. Usually if the doe losses her litter she is most receptive to the buck 36 hours after giving birth. She is at a fitting age to breed, maybe a little young. It is up to you weather you want to re bred her again; you can try to re bred her within 36 hours or if you feel she should wait until she is a year old. Hope this help you out a little; check out this website for more info on rabbits: http://www.arba.net. Source(s): ARBA beneficiary
I suggest you ask your vet because they would know a lot about this characteristics of stuff.


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