How to Feed Rabbits Without the Feed Store (For Forage or Grain Diets)

This video covers how much feed rabbits need, how much feed from the feed store costs, how much meat you get per rabbit, how long it takes to raise a rabbit, simple rabbit nutrition, which forages and grains to grow, how much space is needed to grow the rabbit feed, and the cost to grow your own grain.
All of this information and sources are available in the accompanying article I wrote thehomesteaderschronicle.com/...
This PDF shows you the manure output of each animal (it helps you fertilize your crops).
extension.usu.edu/agwastemana...
The Chicken Version- • How to Feed Chickens W...
The Goat Version- • How To Feed Goats With...
How to Brain Tan a Rabbit Hide - • How to Brain Tan a Rab...
How to Dispatch + Butcher a Rabbit Humanely and Without Waste - • How To Dispatch and Bu...
0:00 Intro
0:42 How Much Rabbit Feed is Needed
2:37 Cost to Feed A Rabbit w the Feed Store
4:18 Forage vs Grains/Pellets?
6:02 Rabbit Reproduction and Weight Gain
8:20 58 Rabbits Per Year
8:32 How Much Meat Per Year?
10:16 Feed Conversion Rate
12:10 How to Reduce Feed Needed
12:45 If I Was in a Survival Situation
13:35 Can I Let My Rabbits Free Range?
14:56 Basic Rabbit Nutrition
21:51 Feeding Forage Only
26:08 How Much Space to Grow Forage
27:46 Feeding Grains and Forage
32:31 Forage Only Space Needed Total
33:03 Forage + Grain Space Needed Total
34:07 Cost to Grow Hay / Forage
36:09 Cost to Grow Grains
39:52 Seed Saving
41:02 Conclusion

Пікірлер: 462

  • @deinse82
    @deinse82Ай бұрын

    The reason why you're getting so many viewers so fast is because you're doing the exact opposite of everybody else in this space: you give pure information instead of selling a narrative and emotionalism, use natural language instead of buzzwords for the algorithm, you use a simple, descriptive thumbnail and title instead of sensationalistic, deceptive ones, you make the video 40 minutes long, if that's how long it takes to present all the information, etc. In short, your videos are substance over style, while everybody else's are style over substance. It's quite unique among KZread homesteaders. Please keep it up.

  • @brittany6229

    @brittany6229

    Ай бұрын

    Amen to this comment!! Her content is a breath of fresh air in a vacuum of "homested" content!

  • @ColAlbSmi

    @ColAlbSmi

    Ай бұрын

    Reminds me of Adam Ragusea’s quick rise in the cooking part of KZread

  • @georgeingridirwin6180

    @georgeingridirwin6180

    Ай бұрын

    Yes Please!! Your content is fantastic. Right to the point, which is why I'm watching. Thank you!!

  • @CC-lv1ox

    @CC-lv1ox

    Ай бұрын

    I love the slides.

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you so much 🥹🥹🥹❤️❤️❤️ your comment means a lot to me. I am so glad this was helpful too ❤️

  • @HolyPineCone
    @HolyPineConeАй бұрын

    Finally a channel dedicated to actual teaching. Sure its nice watching some dude brush his cows and mention one fact a month, but you wont learn much from that. This is gold!

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    I appreciate that, thank you so much!

  • @SgtSnausages
    @SgtSnausagesАй бұрын

    A quarter acre-ish (100 x 100 ft) of Timothy /Orchard Grass is our base. Old-school (Austrian) hand-scythe an hay rake work great. Need shed/lean-to/barn/ to store loose hay. Take about 3 times as much space as square bales. Sweet Potato (vines in Summer, tuber in Winter) - a 25-footer row per Rabbit. Sunchoke (tops - stalk, flower, leaf in Summer, tuber all Winter) ... Mangel Beet / Fodder Beet. Black oil sunflower. (Stalk/leaf/flower in Summer, seed head full of seed all Winter.) Ridiculous amounts of easy to propagate/grow Comfrey. Autumn leaf drop from the yard leaves. Peanut hay - we grow 800 row feet of doubled rows for Human snacking of peanut ... the tops are bundled and dried at harvest for Winter Feed. These make up the bulk of our feed. Currently maintaining 2 quads (M F F F) with about 150 growouts a year. Growouts are tractored. The Mating Mob is not.

  • @DatIIV

    @DatIIV

    Ай бұрын

    If you don't mind me asking, I'm expanding my rabbit setup so would love more info: How many kindlings do you have per female per year? Whats your general growing region? (Im Northern Ontario, love me some sunchokes) Do you have your 2 quads in hutches / cages or 2 colonies? Do you provide extra food to the tractored rabbits or is the pasture they are on good enough? Whats your nail cutting schedule if you have one? How often do you move the tractor? Is your tractor open bottomed or slatted or hardware clothed, etc? Sorry for all the qqs, just very curiou

  • @vonRow
    @vonRowАй бұрын

    Been raising rabbits for almost 10 years now, and I say your #s are pretty much spot on. My friends and family thought my rabbit math was "funny" until I put 380#s in my freezer, 80#s in my neighbors' 60#s in my cousin's, and another 50#s in misc customers' freezers. In a single year. We run 12 to 23 does, and half a dozen bucks, and we breed 3 to 4 litter runs each year, as the weather allows. When the girls kindle, it's not impossible for us to have over 100 kits drop. Some of those go for live animal sales, a few get saved back to keep our broodstock fresh. The rest are headed to "camp." The past couple years we've figured out how to brine and smoke our jointed rabbit parts to make mini rabbit hams. Some of those get tossed into the smoker for a few hours. Rarely any leftovers on those dinner nights.

  • @joebristor7342

    @joebristor7342

    Ай бұрын

    What part of the world are you in? With that many, how many people does it take to maintain them and can you feed them your dogs as dog food or will the bones be a problem like with chicken bones?

  • @sunshineandseizures9537

    @sunshineandseizures9537

    29 күн бұрын

    Mind sharing your rabbit ham brining recipe and smoking process?

  • @Firstfalconfree

    @Firstfalconfree

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@joebristor7342 Cooked chicken bones are the issue for dogs, not uncooked bones. If you are interested to learn more, search raw feeding for dogs. There's lots of info out there these days. I like prey-model raw, personally.

  • @samualaddams705
    @samualaddams705Ай бұрын

    I think I am on my third play through.. This has to be the most densely packed information I have seen on this platform in a long time. Believe it or not the mid level information like how much to feed your rabbits per day by weight will benefit as many people as the breakdown of land per rabbit.

  • @LegacyFarmandFiber
    @LegacyFarmandFiberАй бұрын

    I am so tired of people telling me eating rabbits will cause rabbit starvation. Its crazy how many times I've heard that.

  • @tjeanvlogs9894

    @tjeanvlogs9894

    Ай бұрын

    Rabbit starvation is real *but* it's based on eating late winter wild rabbit with nothing else. It's because a rabbit can get so lean before they start to seriously loose muscle mass. A feel fed rabbit is very healthy food.

  • @Aprild174

    @Aprild174

    Ай бұрын

    I raise meat. There is usually enough fat around the organs to supply people enough needed fat.

  • @Jamesjghome

    @Jamesjghome

    Ай бұрын

    Can’t fix stupid, carry on and enjoy your life

  • @valmac1234

    @valmac1234

    Ай бұрын

    I guess in that extreme case, they could add fats the same way vegans do... Nuts and seeds, problem solved.

  • @thedragonking8854

    @thedragonking8854

    Ай бұрын

    I had actually never heard of rabbit starvation until now. I’ve only been working with meat rabbits for about a year and a half now. So not very long

  • @lindabell6293
    @lindabell6293Ай бұрын

    You not only quell fear but inspire action. Truly a gift.

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you so much 😁❤️

  • @chefevielee
    @chefevieleeАй бұрын

    It's very interesting because in the year. Let's say 1960? The wildlife game fishing land management people put out a Brochure about how growing rabbit would end all world hunger. They suggested that everybody start having rabbits. It was totally crazy.I just happened across this brochure and I have it somewhere in this house.God only knows where. But I bet you could see it online.

  • @cxsey8587
    @cxsey8587Ай бұрын

    Can you make a video on how to actually raise rabbits? Space, cage requirements, best practices, etc. I’d love to try my hand at it, but I have no idea how much space I need or what the different ways to raise them are. And I love the way you make videos, they’re super informative!

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    Great suggestion! Yes I will ❤️

  • @mrf5347

    @mrf5347

    9 күн бұрын

    ​@@CedarHillsHomestead Yes Please

  • @kaylinsimmons37
    @kaylinsimmons37Ай бұрын

    Would love to see a tutorial for a rabbit blanket if you end up making one 👀

  • @danielhurst8863
    @danielhurst8863Ай бұрын

    Zone 7b here in Middle Tennessee, and I have 30+ "wild" meat rabbits that free range that were left from the previous owner. They are domestic animals, as the shape is that of a meat rabbit, but they have breed enough that any particular species is hard to tell. They get, and have not received, any pellet feed. There is hay available, and they eat the hay, plus forage for other food. They also act like a cross between a domestic and wild rabbit, in that they do not leave the 50 acre property, but they have survival instincts of a wild rabbit, they will run and are fast, but become much less wary to an individual with time. They originate from meat rabbits that escaped and created their colonies.

  • @catw5294
    @catw5294Ай бұрын

    I don't plan on keeping rabbits - but in these times never say never - and still i watched the whole thing. I was that fascinated with all the information that you presented. This was one of the best animal husbandry and prepper vidoes that I have ever seen on YT. Your knowledge base is amazing and you presented the information so well. I sub'd and wishing you the best on your channel. Btw, some great additional videos would be how you cook your rabbits. Think rabbit intimidates many because it is not a meat that many were raised eating.

  • @jbnovah
    @jbnovah3 күн бұрын

    Im sitting in an apartment in a shiitty, overcrowded city taking notes and planning for the future. This content is really important. Thank you ❤

  • @aibell4800
    @aibell4800Ай бұрын

    This video was amazing. You did such a good job! Here’s what I especially appreciated: 1. Kept things moving for us ADD people 😂 Nice also because our time is valuable when spending hours researching and learning. 2. Slides that I can go back, screenshot, print and bind for offline reference. 3. All the formulas available so we can scale up, down, or substitute. A wealth of information!

  • @pekopan00
    @pekopan00Ай бұрын

    One of your top comments in your chicken feed video was to make a similar video with rabbits. You're true to your fans and true to your information!

  • @suzannelallen

    @suzannelallen

    Ай бұрын

    I’m new to this channel…. Now I’m going off to find that chicken video you mentioned! 😄

  • @bondfam18
    @bondfam18Ай бұрын

    So glad I found you (watched your chicken video first)! You are a treasure trove of information. Please keep it coming!!!

  • @ZM1306

    @ZM1306

    Ай бұрын

    I also found the chicken video, a few days ago, and instantly subscribed. I love the information like this and the thought exercise of what it would take to be self-sufficient with critters. Really puts things into perspective, and it is not that out of the question either. Edit: I live on 14 acres.... Wonder if she could do one on cattle? What would it take to raise up steak naturally fed? From some casual looking I believe it will take 2 years to get to bucher weight feeding naturally... thought that wouldn't be bad to just have two cattle about and alternately replaice one every year.

  • @fylith6378
    @fylith6378Ай бұрын

    With alfalfa I have been told it is too rich or "hot". So i always feed orchard grass or timothy. I have had my rabbits jump out of their hutches before and they always go exploring. I let them "free range" on nice days, and they always have a blast. they run , jump, dig, eat and do zoomies. I bring them back into their cages after a couple of hours. I have a large enclosed area where my chickens roam. I am loving all this great info. ty so much.

  • @ts694
    @ts694Ай бұрын

    Amazing video. Should be a course in every high school in the country

  • @mattg6472
    @mattg6472Ай бұрын

    Do the books one for chickens one for rabbits. you have already done the work. So cool

  • @JS-jh4cy
    @JS-jh4cyАй бұрын

    God, that a hell of of rabbit stew, all year long

  • @guardiandevil3
    @guardiandevil3Ай бұрын

    Funniest thing about you saying you might be talking too fast is I watched this on 2X speed. Not a critique just funny to hear while I sped it up. Great info though I'm gonna write it down and when I get the cash I'll be implementing a lot of it.

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    Can you please tell that to the two dozen people who told me they’re blocking me because I talk way too fast?! 🤣🤣🤣 it’s crazy how different everyone is. Also thank you so much ❤️

  • @guardiandevil3

    @guardiandevil3

    Ай бұрын

    @@CedarHillsHomestead Don't worry about them they just need to listen faster lol If they don't want rabbit info that's on them. That's also a silly reason to block since it's... a video. You can pause, rewind, even slow it down if you want

  • @jsredrose
    @jsredroseАй бұрын

    I absolutely love this and your other videos. They are so incredibly helpful! I raised rabbits as pets when I was a child, and from my experience, those domesticated rabbits definitely desired to be wild. Maybe it's because my hutches were away from the house, down near the woods, but I saw numerous wild rabbits approach my rabbit cages and touch noses with mine. Mine also loved to escape, and the last one actually took off into the woods, never to be seen again!

  • @reneebulkley1333
    @reneebulkley1333Ай бұрын

    YOU'RE IN TROUBLE NOW, WE WANT MORE! Quail?

  • @brandoncorrales7260

    @brandoncorrales7260

    Ай бұрын

    How about goats?!

  • @project1003
    @project1003Ай бұрын

    Have never raised rabbits for meat (and probably never will), but something that so many people neglect to mention as a benefit of raising rabbits is the non-burning manure. All the manure from our pet rabbits goes directly into our gardens or compost piles without any concern that it will burn the plants like chicken or cow manure can.

  • @y.a.salimu5601
    @y.a.salimu5601Ай бұрын

    You put this out so fast in response to us saying we wanted it. Good job. And ty

  • @reibersue4845
    @reibersue48457 күн бұрын

    Wow, moved to my own homestead 2 years ago and always had rabbits in mind from day 1. I had some major refurbishing to do to get my chicken coop usable and started the chicken journey over a year ago. Hatched my own from my eggs this spring 5 of 8 are roos so freezer camp in the fall. One broody hen was sitting on 11 eggs but mama klutz is either handling them roughly or eating some, not sure which because she has broken 3 so far. This video inspired me to rehab the old coop in the yard to make it suitable for rabbits. It is timely because my biggest fear is having these animals and the supply chain breaks. Chickens free range but i do supplement them with pellet feed. Those carnivores eat everything and without store feed, I'm sure we could get by. I have been working on growing food and herbs too and each year, it gets expanded. This gives me hope that I can sustain rabbits even if I cant get food from a store. Subscribed because i want to learn more about the basics of breeding and caring for them. Thank you for your no nonsense informative video and inspiration.

  • @brittany6229
    @brittany6229Ай бұрын

    This couldn't be better timed! I've seen a ton of questions in a lot of rabbit groups about only pellets vs. Foraged vs. Combo. I love your break downs!

  • @makeshiftmuse251
    @makeshiftmuse251Ай бұрын

    I love the "nerdness" of your videos. Keep it up, I'm here for it.

  • @makeshiftmuse251

    @makeshiftmuse251

    Ай бұрын

    PS The dry delivery (in line with the rest of the content) of infrequent, comic relief is perfect for nerds like me. Seriously, all compliments, love it.

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you so much, I really appreciate it. You would’ve loved my dad, he was the king of the dry humor 😁❤️

  • @fraadebauer
    @fraadebauerАй бұрын

    This is going to sound weird but please read it. You were a godsend to me today I have been a long time rabbit razor since like 1995 and last night I was doing our finances and getting severely depressed about the amount of money that I was shelling out and feed for all my livestock. I have a huge farm and a bunch of different animals to feed It is April of 2024 I am making more money now than I've ever made before have less bills than I've ever had before and I am more broke now than I'm ever been before. I was honestly thinking about getting rid of a lot of my animals just because I couldn't afford the feed bill. This video was an answer to a prayer of how I could keep my rabbits and still feed myself too. I'm going to be binge watching all the rest of your videos that you have. I again want to say thank you so very much from the bottom of my heart for this very good educational video you have a new subscriber! . .

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    Wow, thank you so much for taking the time to share this with me; your story is going to keep me motivated to keep the videos and articles coming. I hope you have the most plentiful garden this year and it feeds your animals with leftovers to spare. A lot of people are in your exact position right now but I have a feeling you are tough, resourceful, and will come out of this better than before. I wish you the very best ❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @bettypearson5570
    @bettypearson5570Ай бұрын

    I grew up on a subsistence style farm and we raised quite a few rabbits. It wasnt that uncommon for small kits to fall out of or in other ways escape the cages. They didnt normally hang out under the cages but would rehome themselves to other nooks and crannies around the farm. They would usually remain close to the farm because of the abundance of food and better protection from the elements. We usually didnt see too many of them unless they got caught in the box traps we had situated around the perimeter of the animal area set to catch small predators.

  • @codygillespie
    @codygillespieАй бұрын

    Great video! Yea it seems that the perennial forage would definatly be the easiest. Im not sure I would be interested in messing with small grains by hand. Corn and sunflowers would be easy to harvest the big seedheads, I think mangle beats would be another great option for easy harvesting. And sunchokes for the perennial ease of only planting once. I'm just thinking the easier the production system, the more likely I am to actually do it, that makes every perennial option MUCH more attractive. Actually I'm thinking tree crops are a way better option to grains in the long run. Chestnuts, hazelnuts, apple, pear, mulberry, honeylocust pods. Will rabbits eat acorns? Way easier to collect food that drops under trees than tilling, planting, weeding, watering, harvesting grains imo.

  • @hillockfarm8404

    @hillockfarm8404

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, rabbits will eat acorns. Limit here was one per rabbit (4 pound rabbits) per day and no problems. Sunchockes/jerusalem artichockes have their quirks gas wise, advice here is not to feed to livestock untill after feb 1st for changes in digestability from frost. I would only feed the stalks, not the tuber. Rabbit diet is above ground feeds, not underground ones. I feed a lot of willow/hazel/reeds/bamboo as long as i can get it in leaf. If you have the room making treehay (check yt search for more info) is easier then cutting grashay. When feeding forage mainly, variety is key, 3 different plants per meal minimum and enough total mix to vary/rotate some at least every day of the week. there is a book beyond the pellet that gives more info.

  • @mattg6472
    @mattg6472Ай бұрын

    What?! You did it! Already the rabbit breakdown . You are good. Your channel is gonna soar

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    I appreciate that! 😁❤️

  • @michelleramganesh9807
    @michelleramganesh980719 күн бұрын

    A great deal of effort went into this presentation which as far as I am concerned stands head and shoulders above the rest. Thank you from the Caribbean island of Trinidad.

  • @wytchwoodhomesteadandkenne5036
    @wytchwoodhomesteadandkenne5036Ай бұрын

    I've barely scratched the surface of this video, but there's some fantastic information here, thank you. I got rid of my pet type rabbits and got all meat rabbits but it's extremely frustrating trying to figure out what you're supposed to feed them because, as you say, everyone has an opinion, and none of them are the same.

  • @wytchwoodhomesteadandkenne5036

    @wytchwoodhomesteadandkenne5036

    Ай бұрын

    Sorry, like an idiot I hit the send button. Anyhow I've cut my rabbits down to one buck and three doe now, due to the high cost of rabbit pellets. My question is, I've been slowly getting my rabbits used to hay, though I have no idea if it's nice alfalfa Timothy Hay grass hay whatever..... But I wanted to get them used to it but some still won't eat it they just make a mess out of it and push it through their cage. If I were to cut out pallets and feed them just hay how long do you think it would take them to adjust and would it be safe for them? I know if you switch their foods around they can get bloat.

  • @hillockfarm8404

    @hillockfarm8404

    Ай бұрын

    @@wytchwoodhomesteadandkenne5036 Limit the pellet, or feed hay first and pellet an hour later. Some will not eat hay or waste so much it is both not funny and questionable if they eat any of it at all. Offer something other then hay and pellet, just start small amounts wise like the one cookie with afternoon tea when kid comes home from school. That will get them used to other foods both what they can digest and willing to eat it. If you can house them with a rabbit that will eat hay & greens that may help to teach them as well. So mainly make certain your breeding does learn to eat more then pellets, feed them such variety from breeding to weaning and the kits will learn to like more things and the mothers milk & cecotropes will make them able to digest it properly.

  • @skullrock1313
    @skullrock1313Ай бұрын

    Sincerely wish I had all this information before I started raising meat rabbits. I love how well you break everything down to detail. Excellent video, I now have about 20 extra screenshots to categorize lol

  • @stephseckold4324
    @stephseckold4324Ай бұрын

    My goodness, that's such a comprehensive presentation!

  • @defective6811
    @defective6811Ай бұрын

    ironically enough, we just got our first flock of 12 chickens in february and I found your chicken feed video - and we are back and forth on meat chickens, but leaning towards, and then you make this one 😆

  • @ponchovanillabean8074
    @ponchovanillabean8074Ай бұрын

    Lady, you are a treasure. I have to watch your videos multiple times to get/retain even a PORTION of the information relayed. Felt like I was back in a college lecture. I realize my mileage may vary since not all corns, hays, etc, etc, etc are created equal. Some questions; Why do you finish on grains? Do you crack them? Does your hay estimate account for the waste? If you have made a hay rack for yours, I'd love to see it. Haha. I will probably have more after about five more views. Thank you for existing and doing your videos.

  • @johnsubick919
    @johnsubick919Ай бұрын

    I've been seeing the $37 chicken feed video in my feed a lot lately (haven't watched it yet), but I didn't realize it was by the same channel! That's so awesome that your channel is doing so well in your first month. I can tell you put a lot of time and effort into the video. I subscribed and I am looking forward to what you and your channel bring!

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you so much and I hope you enjoy it! ❤️❤️❤️

  • @Jamesjghome
    @JamesjghomeАй бұрын

    The BEST logical explanation ever‼️‼️‼️ How can I get this in a book

  • @OzkAltBldgCo-bv8tt
    @OzkAltBldgCo-bv8ttАй бұрын

    When people build Garden walls around their houses and their properties that have footings on them made of stone or concrete the rabbits can be contained within the yard mowing it just like a golf course so short that you could put across it.

  • @rpp7768
    @rpp7768Ай бұрын

    Amazing ❤❤thanks so much, I live in London and purchased a house with a huge land in a remote village in Transylvania, which I renovated and in the winter will move there.plan to grow a lot of stuff. Thank you very much for the information

  • @trianglechookee
    @trianglechookeeАй бұрын

    People like you is why youtube is awesome. great information thank you very much , looking forward to more

  • @donscottvansandt4139
    @donscottvansandt413929 күн бұрын

    I've got 1.5 acr planted in sor gum,oats and peas ... along with a lot of indgious edible vegetation. Ready for my tractors. I'm just trying to find my breeding stock . I've had quite a bit of experience with rabbits. And can't wait to get them started!

  • @andrewplacke7100
    @andrewplacke7100Ай бұрын

    I did have a baby bunny ?6 wks in a tractor get loose/out & she spent the whole summer fending for herself( until we caught her in a live trap for the winter. I didn’t think she would make it through the winter without our intervention). Did VERY well. I would be worried about other plants & flowers they would eat/destroy that you don’t want them too. Total forage(anti-feed fan) as much as possible NW Ohio

  • @alexandria3142
    @alexandria3142Ай бұрын

    I’ve wanted to raise meat rabbits and this is so helpful. If you haven’t already, could you do a video on how to make soap from their fat? I appreciate the work you’ve put into these videos, it sure looks like a lot

  • @jbpreps2122
    @jbpreps2122Ай бұрын

    I am totally in awe of you!!! You did a fantastic job of the video without trying to sell anything and got right to the point👍🏻🤗

  • @balanced4harvest552
    @balanced4harvest5525 күн бұрын

    When I had ReX Rabbit's, I had 2 Apple Tree's that were never Sprayed! Woah, did they love the Twigs from Pruning!

  • @Itisallagame
    @ItisallagameАй бұрын

    WOW! So much effort put in these videos. Thank you!

  • @fredflintystoneea
    @fredflintystoneeaАй бұрын

    Brilliantly put together video. Well done.

  • @pamanderson1417
    @pamanderson1417Ай бұрын

    You did a great job on this! Thank you!

  • @michellehayashi576
    @michellehayashi576Ай бұрын

    Thank you for all your hard work in putting this together!

  • @andrewmckinley6571
    @andrewmckinley6571Ай бұрын

    Thank you for all the solid information in a relatively easy to understand format.

  • @Aprild174
    @Aprild174Ай бұрын

    I've gone from pigs and meat birds to katahdin sheep. They do excellent on straight pasture. No grain.

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    That’s great to know, thank you 😊

  • @gnollio
    @gnollioАй бұрын

    You have such incredibly thorough videos. Thank you for putting together all of this information!

  • @SapoVerdeSalsa
    @SapoVerdeSalsaАй бұрын

    Your presentations are well thought out and easy to understand! Thank you❤

  • @nemanjagradinac5419
    @nemanjagradinac5419Ай бұрын

    Your videos are incredible - especially these informative ones. Really well done on the info and the depictions, clearly a lot of effort but it is much appreciated!

  • @HomesteadHomie_
    @HomesteadHomie_12 күн бұрын

    I LOVE how much information is in this video. So helpful!!

  • @Undercoverbooks
    @Undercoverbooks9 күн бұрын

    Such a wealth of great information! Thank you!

  • @kitwinters8940
    @kitwinters8940Ай бұрын

    Love the Nerding!! Appreciate your utilization of dimensional analysis 🎉❤😊 Thank you so much for all the info in your videos!! True Wealth!!

  • @SteveEh
    @SteveEhАй бұрын

    You are absolutely killing it, with your presentation of information, video flow, everything! So much Information in this and the chicken video. Keep it up!

  • @Willow_and_Sage
    @Willow_and_Sage3 күн бұрын

    I love this content! So much info, simply stated, no filler, great infographics. I have been looking for this content for years.

  • @starrquintero9627
    @starrquintero9627Ай бұрын

    Thank you for giving info!!! So refreshing and helpful 🎉

  • @goals3880
    @goals3880Ай бұрын

    Please please please can you do another video on goats or cows or horses I know that's a lot to ask but please I love your content and these are so so so helpful and omgoodness I would love to one day live a life like yours it's awesome

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    Sure thing! 😁😁😁

  • @Deadwoodrabbitry
    @DeadwoodrabbitryАй бұрын

    The best video I have ever seen on feeding rabbits!

  • @joshtavenner8083
    @joshtavenner8083Ай бұрын

    These videos are awesome. I love how deep you are going into this stuff. They're validating my spreadsheets and offering neat insights. Thank you so much.

  • @tammy5666
    @tammy5666Ай бұрын

    Thank you for not wasting my time!! Subscribed 🎯

  • @PaulieRubinDMize-uu6lc
    @PaulieRubinDMize-uu6lcАй бұрын

    One of the most helpful videos in homesteading. Thank you. This will help alot of people

  • @wild-radio7373
    @wild-radio7373Ай бұрын

    Absolutely FANTASTIC! I really appreciate your including the maths!♡

  • @danielmusick211
    @danielmusick21111 күн бұрын

    Thank you very much for the research and the effort to put this all together. Great data.

  • @Shaedyn27
    @Shaedyn27Ай бұрын

    This is such a fantastic video and very well done. Thank you for this information. It's exactly what we were searching for.

  • @sues6847
    @sues68479 күн бұрын

    I just saw your chicken video and subscribed. I so appreciate your no nonsense way of laying it all out there and will binge watch later after my to do list is done.

  • @livingonwheels519
    @livingonwheels519Ай бұрын

    Wow this is the best, most informative video I have seen. Thank you!

  • @forgedoutcomes
    @forgedoutcomesАй бұрын

    For presenting accurate, concise, and actionable content, your channel is top notch 🤙

  • @devvandyke1195
    @devvandyke119514 күн бұрын

    This is such an excellent break down. Keep up the good work sister 👍🏻

  • @ZombiePrincess013
    @ZombiePrincess013Ай бұрын

    As someone working on restoring a homestead, also located in NW Montana, thank you SO much! Please keep putting out content.

  • @4naturalmedicine
    @4naturalmedicine12 күн бұрын

    This was an absolutely amazing video. I'm glad it came up on my feed of suggestions. I'm going to save this to reference because it was a lot of information to take in, but it was excellent. Thank you!!! I'm going to subscribe to your channel now.

  • @Meanderinghomestead
    @MeanderinghomesteadАй бұрын

    Thank you so much for these videos! It is exactly what I have been wanting to know! You talk at a perfect pace for me. It’s a lot of information to take in so the fast pace is needed so the video isn’t too long. If you have any pig advice I would love a video on that as well! (Especially the Kune Kune breed!)

  • @keenkind
    @keenkindАй бұрын

    Great information and no nonsense. Thank you and please keep up the good work

  • @DatIIV
    @DatIIVАй бұрын

    Amazing that oyu channel is so young and your putting out this kind of informative well made content! I keep rabbits and grow about 30% of their food, looking to tramp that up this year!

  • @brt5273
    @brt5273Ай бұрын

    Great presentation. Very concise and easy to understand. Really appreciate the comparison breakdown of ratios for various different feed.

  • @lindah1515
    @lindah1515Ай бұрын

    Love your content. So much important information. Thank you

  • @duncanhobbs2213
    @duncanhobbs2213Ай бұрын

    Incredible turnaround time

  • @andrewdg
    @andrewdgАй бұрын

    Just when I thought raising rabbits is easy, got hit with a ton of math. Great content and you already sound much better compared to the earlier videos.

  • @user-fe7ii3eo9r
    @user-fe7ii3eo9r24 күн бұрын

    @Cedar Hills Homestead you did a great job. clear and concise. exactly what we all want.

  • @hopechannelcat5462
    @hopechannelcat5462Ай бұрын

    thank you for all your research. i guess that makes me a nerd, too. keep up the good work and information.

  • @Jamesjghome
    @JamesjghomeАй бұрын

    You are a champion of truth and facts, stay authentic

  • @Jesusisnumberone5740
    @Jesusisnumberone5740Ай бұрын

    This is the type of math and research that is exactly what I was looking for. You must have been a STEM major haha our brains are similar and i am constantly doing math with stuff like this

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    Ha, I was working on becoming a veterinarian but I had some monkey wrenches thrown into my plans. Now I homestead and write instead. 😁🫶🏻

  • @kranzonguam
    @kranzonguamАй бұрын

    👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼 Clear and well presented! Thank you for the breakdowns, and no bs realities!

  • @anthonytroia1
    @anthonytroia1Ай бұрын

    Amazing video. This is the best source (books, journals, internet, etc.) I have come across regarding pellet-free rabbitry. "Subscribed"

  • @dragonbunny660
    @dragonbunny660Ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for the info! I've had to research all of this on my own and while I arrived at similar conclusions, I had to go through years of trial and error and hunting the Internet. This would have saved me so much time and frustration. I had intentions to make videos after a proof of concept phase, but you've presented it much better than I could. Thanks again. 🙂

  • @krystalspringer
    @krystalspringerАй бұрын

    This is how you do it, great information, way to go and keep it up!

  • @Regenfarmdream
    @RegenfarmdreamАй бұрын

    Amazing video! Thank you so much for sharing all of this truly incredible research and information. I appreciate it so much! KZread needs more videos like this. Thank you!

  • @Kunigaz214
    @Kunigaz214Ай бұрын

    Thank you for all the amazing information!

  • @CedarHillsHomestead

    @CedarHillsHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    Oh my gosh, wow, thank you so much! 🤯❤️❤️

  • @Kunigaz214

    @Kunigaz214

    Ай бұрын

    @CedarHillsHomestead I watched your video on chicken feed and this one back 2 back. As someone just getting into homesteading the info was mind blowing. Gave me so many ideas, I have both bookmarked to reference again later.

  • @nathanziegman9262
    @nathanziegman9262Ай бұрын

    Great information that isn't easy to find, thank you. I have to admit, I'm going to do my best to make things tougher for you because I'm sharing this far and wide!

  • @rednecksamurai
    @rednecksamuraiАй бұрын

    Thank you for this video. I am doing my homework to begin raising rabbits for food/pelts and this video is a pure goldmine. Count on me watching the rest of your videos as part of my 'homework' before I start building the hutches/tractors

  • @GrandmomZoo
    @GrandmomZooАй бұрын

    Thank you! Awesome information!

  • @kenyamarlow1408
    @kenyamarlow1408Ай бұрын

    Thank you for this video. We are looking into getting meat rabbits. FYI I am in Southwest Arkansas and square bales here are minimum $12, so we are not so lucky lol. Round bales are $45-$75. Refer to 2:47

  • @alfredoaculerl
    @alfredoaculerlАй бұрын

    My new favorite english channel ❤

  • @hargrovegeneralgoods
    @hargrovegeneralgoods14 күн бұрын

    This was so informative! Amazing content! I'm in the process of getting a meat rabbit program going.