I do hope you at least took it to a vet.
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I do hope you at least took it to a vet.
WE DON'T KNOW.
And we took her to the Pet E.R in our town, and they sent the bunny to the E.R that is in the city, but there was no hope left...
That's sad :(
Ha, someone in the "Last Poster Wins" thread actually thinks I give a shit about them and their opinions.
I found some info:
"A rabbit's cecum maintains a delicate mix of protozoa, yeast and good bacteria, which is crucial to keeping your rabbit healthy. If something upsets the delicate bacterial balance (such as stress; some oral antibiotics such as penicillin & related drugs; a high fat, low fiber diet; too many carbohydrates, etc.), bad bacteria will begin to grow. These bad bacteria produce toxins that can be harmful or fatal to your rabbit. On the other hand, the products of good cecal fermentation are crucial to healthy gut flora, because through coprophagy, the oral re-ingestion of the cecal pellets produced by this fermentation process, the rabbit can absorb by normal digestion the special nutrients and vitamins contained in the cecal pellets. Some evidence suggests that bacteria from these [re-ingested] cecal pellets help the food digest while in the stomach (Laura Tessmer, B.Sc. and Susan Smith, Ph.D: Rabbit Nutrition 1998)."
Thats what i found
So keeping a rabbit as a pet is harder than it looks.
The bunny's name was Binah.
We had for about a year.
Binah must have been a very young little guy huh?
GIRL.
And yes.
And @O5-7; That "Last Poster Wins" "Argument" was amusing.
I'll need to take a quick shower fast.
I need some Apple Juice.
Apple juice is plentiful here in the apple state :P
I need more cores in my brain and it calculates information to slow...10 billion core,16 Hz is not fast enough...