- Joined
- Aug 17, 2005
- Messages
- 1,407
Went out mushroom hunting tonight in a small wooded area down the road, where everyone else must have had the same idea because the woods were packed with people. Anyway, while looking for mushrooms i found a displaced baby rabbit. It is still a baby, but eyes are open, so i am guessing 10-14 weeks old or so? After a nice long thought on the matter, i decided to take the little fellow home with me. There was just way to many people in the woods, and he was bound to get stepped on or ran over.
When i picked him up he was quite scared and didn't move much. I could tell he had been hunkered down in that spot for a bit, and probably a bit dehydrated because of the heat, and lack of getting his mothers milk. So when i got him home i went out and got some formula for baby animals, got some advice on what type to get, and basically its a small puppy formula that can be used for raccoons, rabbits, etc. plus the guy there said he has rescued several wild rabbits and used it successfully for the most part. Wild rabbits are extremely hard to care for and keep alive as babies as it is, but i have done this before as a child successfully, so why not as an adult?
I rescued a rabbit when i was in 6th grade and its eyes were barely open. Fed it with an eye dropper, and successfully raised it into an adult, at which point i kept it for several years, then finally let it go, and it came back to my moms garden every year and ate her vegetables (hehe).
Anyway, at first the little guy wouldn't eat the formula i got, so i was getting kinda worried. I got an eye dropper instead of the bottle and tried force feeding him a little bit, and ended up getting him to lick it out the dropper. I also went and got some pedialyte and mixed a small portion with the formula and finally got him to drink a bit from a bottle. Not a whole lot, maybe like 15 ml or so, but he is much more energetic now to say the least.... little things can jump let me tell you...
I am not 'to' worried about rabies, but i am curious what the probability with a baby rabbit having rabies would be? He appears quite healthy apart from being frightened, and partially dehydrated. But i have been wearing gloves as a precaution with him and trying to keep everything as sanitary as possible when dealing with him.
Tommorrow i am going to try to get ahold of a wild animal rescue and get him into somewhere. Hopefully i find something suitable for him. He is so cute though
. Anyone with any comments or advice would be appreciated...
Thanks,
nate
When i picked him up he was quite scared and didn't move much. I could tell he had been hunkered down in that spot for a bit, and probably a bit dehydrated because of the heat, and lack of getting his mothers milk. So when i got him home i went out and got some formula for baby animals, got some advice on what type to get, and basically its a small puppy formula that can be used for raccoons, rabbits, etc. plus the guy there said he has rescued several wild rabbits and used it successfully for the most part. Wild rabbits are extremely hard to care for and keep alive as babies as it is, but i have done this before as a child successfully, so why not as an adult?
I rescued a rabbit when i was in 6th grade and its eyes were barely open. Fed it with an eye dropper, and successfully raised it into an adult, at which point i kept it for several years, then finally let it go, and it came back to my moms garden every year and ate her vegetables (hehe).
Anyway, at first the little guy wouldn't eat the formula i got, so i was getting kinda worried. I got an eye dropper instead of the bottle and tried force feeding him a little bit, and ended up getting him to lick it out the dropper. I also went and got some pedialyte and mixed a small portion with the formula and finally got him to drink a bit from a bottle. Not a whole lot, maybe like 15 ml or so, but he is much more energetic now to say the least.... little things can jump let me tell you...
I am not 'to' worried about rabies, but i am curious what the probability with a baby rabbit having rabies would be? He appears quite healthy apart from being frightened, and partially dehydrated. But i have been wearing gloves as a precaution with him and trying to keep everything as sanitary as possible when dealing with him.
Tommorrow i am going to try to get ahold of a wild animal rescue and get him into somewhere. Hopefully i find something suitable for him. He is so cute though
Thanks,
nate