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The subject of intentional breeding or meat rabbits is prohibited. The answers provided on this board are for general guideline purposes only. The information is not intended to diagnose or treat your pet.  It is your responsibility to assess the information being given and seek professional advice/second opinion from your veterinarian and/or qualified behaviorist.

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Forum BEHAVIOR My new bunny is eating his bedding!

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    • Beanslife
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        I’ve had Bean for 3 days, he is 2 months old. I bought him CareFresh bedding, and lined his cage with it (about an inch and a half, covers the entire surface of the bottom of the cage). I just got home and noticed he’s been eating it! He has pellets and hay available, but he’s choosing to eat his bedding. Should I leave a space in the cage where there’s no bedding? Thank you 


      • flemishwhite
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        195 posts Send Private Message

          Rabbits are very chewy animals.  Their teeth are constantly growing so they have an instinctive urge to chew.  Our Flemish babies have ample food to eat.  Green leafy veggies, pellets, and fruit treats.  They instinctively love to chew their oat hay that’s in their litter boxes. .   The straw helps grind down their teeth and they love the oat kernels.   Their litter boxes, of oat hay are lined with newspaper.  They will dig out the hay and then eat the newspaper…this notwithstanding the fact they are amply fed. There’s more.  We have cardboard boxes under the dining room table for them to play with.  They love to push the cardboard boxes, jump in them, and also eat them.  Rabbits can  eat paper to some extent without harm.  Their cecum stomach can digest cellulose so paper is technically possible for them to eat. (The ink may not be good for them).

          Rabbits can digest cellulose, so paper and cotton will probably be OK..  They cannot digest polyester and other like artificial fabrics.

          If it’s OK for bunny to eat his bedding, you need to know what it’s made of.  

          And as an additional note. They are active animals.  They like to have cage free time.  They usually are very good with litter box behavior so it’s safe to let them have free time to hop around,  When we got our two rabbits, they were about three months old and we let them roam free in the house until we went to bed or left the house.  When we wanted them back in their pen, it was a real problem to shoo them back in. They didn’t like being in the pen.  We gave up, and left the pen door open 24/7.  Now that the pen door is constantly open they like to be in the pen!  They do like to exercise and run around the house every now and then. 


        • copterhealer
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          1 posts Send Private Message

            Hi, I am looking for bedding for the comfort of my bunny, is the meaning of bedding different here?


          • Bam
            Moderator
            16871 posts Send Private Message

              copterhealer, most of us here don’t use bedding except in the litter-box. This is so the bun will get litter-trained. If you put the same bedding in the cage as in the litterbox, the bun will pee and poop everywhere.

              For comfort you can use hay or fleece-blankies or any other type of bedding you like. They should have sth to dig in and rearrange, because that’s how rabbits are naturally. But in nature, bunnies don’t line their warrens with soft stuff exept when they have babies, they wrap the tiny babies in the mum’s own fur.

              Some buns will eat bedding, and that’s sth to look out for. Too much non-food can potentially cause GI obstruction. To prevent a bun from eating what it shouldn’t you can give it twigs and branches of willow or apple or use straw or hay as bedding. Straw isn’t nutritious but it’s not harmful if the bun eats it and it has beneficial fiber.

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          Forum BEHAVIOR My new bunny is eating his bedding!