1 can goat's milk (grocery store)
1 egg yolk
I don't dilute the goat's milk. I use a small baby animal bottle
(see your vet or feed store), cutting a slit (not hole) in the tip.
As the baby presses down, milk comes out easier. You may have to
apply some pressure to the bottle to help force milk out.
I heat up the bottle of milk (take lid/nipple off) in the microwave...low
heat, 2 seconds at a time till milk is lukewarm. Shake and test
temperature just like human baby's formula on your wrist. Kits only
drink warm milk. As soon as it cools, they stop drinking.
And there's the technique: apply too much pressure, too
much comes out flooding the baby's mouth and nose; too
little pressure, and the baby gets worn out trying to get milk.
Keep a paper towel handy to dab its nose and mouth as needed.
Oh yeah...warm the bottle up again for the second helping. DON'T
WARM UP THE CAN OF MILK. I throw out any unused milk in the bottle.
I keep the canned milk for 7 days in the refrigerator.
You can see the ingested milk through the skin of the kit's tummy.
Gently tickle its stomach and genital area with a moistened cotton
ball to stimulate urination/ elimination (yes... you're imitating
the doe's licking behavior). Return the kit to its nestbox and it
will dig down into the fur/hay/aspen shavings and go soundly to
sleep. That's your reward for a job well done! :-)
2. Probiotic
gel is fed to the kits every 2-3 days for the first 3
weeks. It can be found at any feed store. It is actually sold in
the beef section in huge syringe-looking tubes under various brand
names. It contains lactobacillus (LB)...which is the good bacteria
needed in a rabbit's hindgut. LB is also in most rabbit feeds, Doc's
Rabbit Pellets Enhancer, Winner's Edge, etc. The more
ingested...the better.
It's a paste, so mix a teeny, tiny bit (1/8 tsp.) with some goat's
milk and feed it to the kit with an eye dropper. I buy Probiotic
paste/gel from feed stores and give doses to ANY rabbit in stress,
sluggish appetite, ill, etc. It only helps...never hurts.
If you can...order some tiny tubes just for feeding kits. Benebac
Beneficial Bacteria pet gel: 4 half ounce tubes for $5.
It's great for feeding babies probiotic gel right out of a baby-size
tube!
3. Beware
of ENTERITIS!!!
This is a disorder due to over-loading the hindgut and
lack of roughage in the diet. Enteritis is a danger when switching
babies over to solid foods. Symptoms are a smelly, loose stool and
hearing a "sloshing" sound when the baby is gently shaken.
It is very hard to treat this condition. And it is highly contagious.
The probiotic/Benebac helps prevent this ugly baby-killer illness.
But it usually is best to immediately cull the kit, change out the
nest materials, and sterilize the nestbox to prevent the other babies
from getting enteritis. Wash your hands between handling different
animals to prevent the spread of enteritis beyond this litter.
4. At 3 weeks
of age, after milk feedings, I offer the baby a variety
of solid foods, adding a new item every 3 days: leafy timothy hay,
steamed/crimpled oats from the feed store, Doc's Enhancer pellets,
plain Cheerios, and tiny chunks of raw sweet potato or banana. Be
sure to feed the probiotic/Benebac to help digestion of the solid
foods. I have even fed Gerber baby foods (spinach, and sweet potatoes,
banana). The goal is to get the baby on solid foods and weaned off
milk by age 6 weeks.