THE BENEFITS AND USES OF RABBIT MANURE

Anyone who comes to the rabbitry and my homestead will see our many gardens. I have been asked many times what is your secret. You must use miracle grow they say. I just chuckle, thinking they just opened up a can of worms, and worms love rabbit manure! And now they are going to hear it! Now they get to discuss all about rabbits any there purpose on the homestead, the conversation will start about the many benefits and uses of rabbit manure, but more will come. I am determined to spread the word of raising rabbits, and all the many benefits that go with it. That’s how I came up with our slogan – Raising Meat Rabbits To Save The World!

Rabbit manure is one of the best manures for your organic gardens! It will increase poor soil by improving soil structure and also improving the life cycle of the beneficial microorganisms in the soil. Rabbits are very good at producing an excellent source of manure. It is rich in many nutrients and very simple to use. One doe and her offspring will produce over one ton of manure in a year.

Rabbit manure is packed with nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, and many minerals, lots of micro-nutrients, plus many other beneficial trace elements such as calcium, magnesium, boron, zinc, manganese, sulfur, copper, and cobalt just to name a few.

N – P – K VALUES – Rabbit= N- 2.4 P- 1.4 K- .60, Chicken=N- 1.1 P-.80  K- .50, Sheep=N- .70 P- .30 K-.60, Horse=N- .70 P-.30 K- .60, Steer=N- .70 P-.30 K-.40, Dairy Cow=N- .25 P-.15 K-.25  As you can see by the nutrient values of farm manures and how they measure up and rabbit manure really shines! Rabbit manure also doesn’t smell as strong as other manures making it easy to use.

Nitrogen(N)- Rabbit manure is higher in nitrogen than sheep, goat, pig, chicken, cow or horse manure. Plants need nitrogen to produce a lush green growth. Nitrogen helps plants grow greener and stronger helping the plant reach its full potential. This is great for all those quick growing salad greens! Great for the early growth of tomatoes, corn, and many other vegetables.

Phosphorus(P)- Rabbit manure is also higher in phosphorus than the other manures. It helps with the transformation of solar energy to chemical energy. Which in turn helps with proper plant growth. Phosphorus also helps plants to withstand stress. Phosphorus in the soil encourages more and bigger blossoms helping with flowering and fruiting also great for root growth.

Potassium(K)- Potassium helps with fruit quality and reduction of disease plants will not grow without it. Plants use potassium as an enzyme to produce proteins and sugars.They also uses potassium to control water content.

More than just the awsome NPK values of rabbit manure it is loaded with a host of micro-nutrients as well as organic matter that improves soil structure, drainage, and moisture retention. Vegetable gardens, pastures, and flower gardens all will benefit from using rabbit manure. It helps retain soil moisture and soil structure.

Rabbit manure is one of the few fertilizers that will not burn your plants when added directly to the garden and can be safely used on food plants.

Grab a handful from under the hutch and use it as is, or work it into the topsoil. Rabbit manure at first glance many seem to be less powerful than commercial fertilizers but in reality they are better and healthier for your garden providing food and nourishment for your plants as well as earthworms and other beneficial animals and microorganisms in your soil. So why use chemical additives that are know to kill all soil life. Some manures have to be aged so they do not harm your garden, Bunny Berries can be used fresh as is. This is also a very organic way to add nutrients back to you soil.

HOW TO USE-

Use It As Is – “Bunny Berries” – Because rabbit manure is dry,odorless,and in pellet form makes it suitable for direct use in the garden. It can be applied any time of the year and helps give your plants a boost during the growing season or as a storehouse of nutrients when applied in the late fall and winter. Because it is considered a cold manure there is no threat of burning plants and roots. So use it as a top- dressing, mulch around plants, bury in the ground under transplants or just working it into the soil right from the rabbit. This is the easiest way to use your Super fertilizer! Grab a handful and add it to your garden today. The Berries are a time release capsule of goodness for your soil. This is the way i use it the most in my gardens, so the next time you find yourself knee deep in rabbit poop just add it to your garden!

Compost It – Composting rabbit manure is an easy process and the end result will be ideal fertilizer for gardens plants and crops. I only compost the rabbit manure/urine/shaving mix i get from my drop pans in the stack a hutch setup. Simply add to your compost bin or pile and add in equal amounts of dry straw or shaving to the manure (Unless like me you only compost the shaving/poop mix-the shaving have all ready been added plus the urine starts the heat up fast!) you can also mix in your usally composted materials grass clippings, leaves ,kitchen scraps. Mix with a pitchfork and keep the pile moist not saturated you may have to cover it with a tarp. It will take any were from a few months to a year depending on how often you turn it. I have heard some of my composting friends complaining that their compost pile will not heat up. The poop/urine/shaving mix is the best compost activator i have seen. Add it, turn it, and it will heat up! If you can get your hands on even a small bucket of this mix every now and then you and your compost pile will be in nitrogen heaven as far as composting rabbit manure goes rabbit manure is nitrogen on steroids it will get your pile hot and breaking down at accelerated rates .Those friends with the cold compost piles are usally here on cage cleaning day with buckets and shovels. Now if i could just figure out to have them do all the cleaning chores!

Manure Tea – “Bunny Brew” – Rabbit manure tea is the colored water that manure has been steeped in and is full of nutrients making a concentrated liquid organic garden fertilizer! The nutrients from the manure dissolve easily into the water were it can be added to sprayers or watering cans. To make the tea, put a heaping shovel full of rabbit manure in a burlap bag or porous cloth with the four corners tied together. Put the bag in a 5 gallon bucket and fill with water. Allow it to seep in the warm sunshine for a week. Remove the bag and suspend it above the bucket until it stops dripping. You can speed up the process by putting manure directly into the bucket with the water and let it sit for 3 days, stirring daily. Then put some burlap over the top of another empty bucket (making a strainer) and pour thru the cloth to strain out the solids. Suspend the solids in the makeshift strainer above the bucket until it stops dripping. In both processes the solids will not have released all their nutrients to the tea, and they will still be a beneficial soil amendment (put into the garden or compost pile). If you have many plants, you may want to use a big barrel by using the ratio of 1 part manure to 5 parts water. To use the Tea, dilute it until it is about the color of kitchen tea, which should be about one cup of the concentrated manure tea to a gallon of water. Use it to dip every new plant before you transplant them. Dip only the root ball, until bubbles stop coming to the surface (also do this to trees and shrubs before transplanting). Also wet furrows before planting, and fill holes with it before you plant trees or shrubs. Wait until it is all absorbed into the soil allowing all the nutrients to permeate the nearby soil of the plant you are planting. Making and using manure tea is a great way to give your garden crops the extra boost they need for optimal health and growth. Give once a week as a fertilizer and throw out your miracle grow! Experience will tell how often to use and how much. Now that you know how to make bunny brew, you can use it all the time to give your plants that extra boost!

Growing worms- I am not going to go into this in to much detail in this post as i am writing up a post on benefits of raising worms and rabbits together for sustainability. Although fresh rabbit manure is considered one of the best organic garden fertilizers it is also the best worm feed and bedding. You can grow and raise worms directly in the rabbit droppings under cages, or hutches, or making boxes and adding the manure to those. Rabbit manure along with wasted feed makes some of the best worm feed there is. When properly cared for red worms eliminate unsightly manure piles, odor and fly problems. The best worm to use is the red worm or red wiggler(Eisenia fetida). You should have about 200 to 400 worms per square foot of surface area. To start off add bedding material to the bed. Bedding could be any combination of carbon material-shredded paper,decomposing leaves, hay, straw, peat moss, ect. Remember that worms cannot eat dry rabbit manure so maintain moisture level so the bedding is damp. Worms do not like salt and rabbit urine contains salt so you must remember to remove wet urine spots regularly adding them to the compost or directly to the garden. Keep adding a thin layer of your carbon material of choice to cover the surface of the bedding and loosen the bedding occasionally with a fork do not use a shovel(worms do not like being cut in half).The rabbits and worms will do the rest. You can remove and harvest worms and replace bedding every 3 to 4 months, if the worms are doing their job. Join The Rabbit Revolution! Subscribe to our blog and get the updates as they are posted. The Benefits Of Raising Worms With Rabbits For Sustainability will be a good one! I been working on this one for a long time!

Making Methane- This is something I will be experimenting with this summer with a 55 and 30 gallon barrel the 30 gallon nesting inside the 55 gallon barrel with a slurry of rabbit manure, shavings and urine mix being anaerobic composted to make methane. I will be trying to run a lawnmower engine hooked to a alternator to charge my battery bank stay tuned for this one! I will be posting the information on making and using this unit soon!

Hope this answers all you questions on rabbit manure and its benefits as well if you have any question or other ideas please let me know I will post them or add them to this post!

About riseandshinerabbitry

Raising Meat Rabbits To Save The World! Join The Rabbit Revolution! Like Us On FACEBOOK! Selling Breeding Stock Pure and Hybrid Crosses. We are more than just a rabbitry we are a way of life!

Posted on March 31, 2012, in Uncategorized and tagged , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. 85 Comments.

  1. Thank you, thank you, thank you! This was one of the thing we wanted to do on our farm this year. This post seals it. We will have rabbits shortly! Great eating plus perfect fertilizer for the garden. Thanks again for sharing!
    Scott

  2. Matthew from Gooseneck, Ga

    Excellent information! Great writing!

  3. Ive just started to add it to my garden. Well see. I know someone who swears by it. Keep us posted on the methane production, that could be interesting!

    • I think it has been the best thing for my garden! Really got to get some projects done and the methane setup is one!

      • I’m also very interested in the methane setup. We’re doing most of the others already, other than the worm beds.

        In addition, as we’re setting up raised beds on our new homestead, we’re putting a very heavy layer of rabbit droppings & wasted feed from under the cages as the middle layer of our new beds (bottom: split wood, attempting kind of a hugelkultur concept, middle: clean-out from under the rabbit cages, top: dirt/top soil/compost. I’m setting up seven 4×12 ft beds about two foot deep (using logs, double stacked from, cottonwoods & alders I’ve taken down), we’ll see how it goes.

  4. I am very happy for this benefit of imformation about RABBIT.

  5. Can I also add the urine soaked shavings to the bunny berries when mulching around the plants? Or is it best to compost that first, you said that the urine heats up fast. Will it burn the plants? I have just the one pet rabbit, he only fills one litter box(cat sized) a week.

  6. I move my Silver Fox buns into my basement for the winter. They are on the day light end but I’ve also added flourescent lights.That saves the aggravation of encasing hutches in plastic and fighting frozen water. I put peat in the trays of the cages and clean them about once a week into a wheelbarrow which I dump directly into my garden. Last year, I added lime to the trays to offset acidity of the peat but haven’t this year. I’m wondering if this is really necessary and if so what the proportions should be.
    Last summer, I had a terrible time getting the does to breed and those that did managed to lose every kit. Last Nov and April my buns did very well at the show in Newport but this year I had nothing. Hopefully I have two does ready to kindle in the next week and will have some showable buns and some to eat.

    • I think if you dump the peat and bunny berries in the garden in fall and winter, by the time spring comes, just add little lime to the garden. This works great (Thats what I do). Everybody thinks I have a green thumb, but its just the rabbit poop! Some of the best show rabbits have never even had a litter! Keep trying and good luck!

  7. Thanks for the info and passion 🙂

    If I add my bunny pellets to the garden do I also need to add something like rock dust or kelp meal to add trace elements/nutrients? Or do the bunny pellets contain adequate amounts of everything my plants need?

    If you do recommend adding another source of trace elements, which do you recommend: Kelp meal, azomite, rock dust?

  8. I planted some seeds for transplants and started some rabbit manure tea today. It seemed right, but I went looking for encouragement and found your blog. Thanks for the encouragement!

  9. thank you for the information I needed to get started. this writing was so easy to understand and straight forward I am excited to start again thank you for your posting and time, Sheri

  10. I live in Lacey WA and want to find a place to purchase Rabbit Manure for gardening.. Where can I buy it??

  11. Sandra Lehrman

    You answered my questions. I knew my father 50 yrs ago raised rabbits in the Seattle area and his rhubarb was considered prize winning as he raised it below and behind the rabbit hutches. They were huge stems and as tender as could be and he credited it all to rabbit manure and water (rain)! I wanted to grow rhubarb so started looking for rabbits! Thank you again for the added information to help me do it! Sandy

  12. Thomas Kebwaro

    I read an article detailing about use of rabbit urine as an organic pesticide on vegetables,how far can you attest to it?

  13. rachelmccleary

    thanks!

  14. thank you for the information i just started rearing rabbits i have found that so intresting

  15. Good info. I have saved this page in my favourites. But one question. Can I put bunny berries (just the berries) into soil that I am about to sprinkle with veg and flower seeds?

  16. Hi thanks so much for your info – I have kitty litter trays of straw in their hutch where they poo and urinate and then I just empty it out every day or every other day on my garden beds. So far my lemons seem to be loving it. Sometimes the mix is quite wet with all the urine trapped in the the tray but I still throw it all on. That is the only concern I had – about the urine perhaps being a bit strong??

    • I have a few stack a hutch cages with trays under each cage. I use shavings in the drop pans as a absorbent. I do compost this mix, it heats up! The urine and wood shaving mix with the bunny berries mixed in, can get a compost pile going! I did have some old school hutches with wood slatted floors and used a straw bedding (I was young then) my mom always used the straw/bunny berry mix right in the garden it worked good for us then. I feel that the straw will not heat up like the shavings, and there was always worms in this mix after a month or two in the garden. I always knew were to look for bait fro fishing back then. You also seem to be having good results, do you agree about you mix not heating up? Thanks for reading my posts!

  17. This is helpful.i will rear some rabbits in the near future.

  18. Hi
    i have two pet rabits. i bed them down on straw/shavings with newspaper underneath.
    my rabbits use a litter tray which i line with a sheet of newspaper and straw. do i just empty the litter tray into my regular compost bin? also they sometimes poop outside the litter tray so these poop (balls) i can just push right into the soil of my veggie patch have i got this right?

    thanks in advance i’m in britain incase this makes a difference to the composting as its normally cold over here!!

  19. Since Rabbit manure can be used straight on food plants, can you use it straight into a hydroponic fish pond? I have seen some hydroponic set-up’s that use chicken coops over a fish pond. The chicken manure helps balance the pond and/or feed the fish. I’m leaning towards raising meat rabbits instead of chickens. Thanks.

  20. Great info dude, i raise runnybabbits myself basically for bunny pellets { and to eat } to apply to my garden its great stuff it “DOES’ make a noticeable diffrance! Everybody out thier, listen and learn from this man he knows what hes talking about!!

  21. I am planning on feeding my rabbits on green chop {winter rye grass and clover and millit or sorghum green chop all summer, hopeing to eliminate the expensive rabbit feed can I do this?

  22. Hi,
    Do you know if the rabbit tea has the same amount nutrients/nitrogen as the dry rabbit manure you put on the garden? We’re doing a project here in Haiti and we found a good source of rabbit manure but we want to see if we can stretch the manure a little:) If this work’s better to make the tea then I think we might finally have good fertilizer.Thanks

  23. Let me reinforce your article with my experience… I’ve just started terrace garden, bought seeds, potting soil, etc. One of the reasons for my gardening project was to provide lettuce, for my pet bunny. I added a berry or two in each pot and made “Bunny Tea”, which I use every week.

    Being new at this, I researched germination times and % for all the plants I started (mostly herbs, spices, but also spinach, lettuce cherry tomatoes, beans…). I was astonished to see my plants germinating in half the time they were supposed to! In fact, arugula germinated just two days after planting! Now, 15 days after planting, I have success rate over 95 % and couldn’t be happier. All of my plants from mid-April have established a first set of true (yet, still small) leaves,

    I also grew up with pet bunny and my grandma used her berries for tea for her potted flowers, which were the envy of the entire neighborhood. In fact, a friend gave me a scare about “burning my plants”, so I was researching to set her straight 🙂

  24. Lola J Stanley

    This year @ Kane Nursing Home we had garden carts and the one that we use rabbit poo on are wonderful. The only one we didn’t do was the lead person-and he started telling people not to eat the vegetables from the ones that had it on. Then had the nerve to tell me he was hurt that I didn’t do his-well he knows it all and that is nothing. I was raised with my Dad using the rabbit poo on our gardens and the results are amazing. It is not harmful but very beneficial-thank you for supporting it. PS Mr. Know it All there are not harmful “Nitrates” in this-and you better stop eating other grown food!!!!

  25. Amazingly informative article! A wealth of wisdom for sure. Thank You for sharing it with all of us. I’ll be watching for more guidance. Now I can start my Rabbit Farm, and maybe my car with the Methane! Talk about ingenuity! God Bless you All, Merry Christmas! Happy Hanukkha!

  26. I’m hoping that you are still watching for comments/questions on here, I know this began at least 3 years ago. I just started veggie gardening last year & even though most of my plants were planted a little late & felt pretty good about my success, for my first time. This year I’ve paid attention to the planting times of all my veggies & fruits, and got everything planted on time. Then, my husband comes home with a truck bed full of rabbit poo for my garden. (A friend of his raises rabbits & told him it was excellent for gardens AND he got it for free! AWESOME!) I was thrilled because I’d heard how amazing rabbit poo was, but he decided to be a sweet, wonderful husband and shovel this (at least 1/2) on to my flowerbed before I got home. I’m worried about my seeds that were planted & had not yet sprouted. Will the extra 2-3 inches of rabbit poo be too much for them to come up through? Plus, it’s not just rabbit berries. It’s a mixture of everything. I’m guessing poo, urine, oats, hay. Is that going to cause problems with my newly planted garden? I do have the other 1/2 of the truck load on my compost pile, which will be amazing & I’m super excited about! (My compost pile is less than a year old so I know this will help.) I’m not too worried about the actual plants that I have planted, but more so the seeds that were planted at the correct dept & now have an extra 2-3 inches on top, lol.

  27. I have an indoor rabbit and we use the pre made little along with a handful of peper based pellets for smell. Can you compost these or are there toom manny additives to worry about from the paper by-products: We use these two products from Petco:
    So Phresh Paper Pellet Small Animal Litter for the pellets with Carefresh Natural Pet Bedding on top for the main layer. Can I take this out of the hutch and use i fresh in my veggie beds? Or compost it?

  28. Just added about 40 lbs of rabbit manure to my garden – it stinks very badly. I live in a sub division, how do I eliminate the order before the neighbors get mad at me? (I put used coffee grounds out with to help, but the ammonia order is so strong!)

  29. If i put bunny poop in garden in the fall can i add more at planting time thank u

  30. Thanks for the fantastic ad quite thoroug tutelage…:keep up the great work…!!! I am more than pleased to have found you and am excited to hear all you have to put out there….!!! Thanks, Jeanne

  31. terri christenson

    I finally have access to rabbit manure again….I used it for years in vege garden. Such great stuff !!! Now I want to use it on my houseplants. I started by topdressing a couple older plants…so far so good, but I have noticed a few pellets look moldy…it was somewhat fresh when used. Should it be sterilized for use on indoor plants? If so, how do I do that? LOVE your website !!

  32. Hi, just saw this article and think it is great, we have 3 giant rabbits and they all produce mountains of pellets. I wanted to know can the strew bedding be used to make the bunny Brew as it seems our rabbits don’t go in one spot but like to spread it around, and this means it gets mixed up with the strew. Or do we need to separate it. Thanks for any reply now.

  33. When you harvest the compost with worms in it. Is there any way to leave the worms behind and only get the soil? Or do you have to get more worms?
    Thanks, Anita

  34. I was so happy to come across this post while searching for blogs that are similar to mine. I do my best to simplify & explain the homestead lifestyle through my posts.
    But, when it comes to using rabbit manure in a garden… I can’t imagine being able to put it into any better words than you have in this post.
    Rabbit manure is an INCREDIBLE source of the nutrients your organic crop will need to shine.
    Awesome post.

  35. I honestly cannot stand worms at all. I would rather have a spider or cockroach crawl over me! But, if worms can help in the whole process of making your lawn great, than I would deal with them. Or I will actually have my husband deal with them!

  36. your blog is very encouraging to me I helped my dad as a kid on the farm take care of meat rabbits, but you know how kids are short attention spans especially when it comes to work. Now I am trying my hand at it from what I can remember and sometimes wishing I had paid more attention and really wish I still had my dad with us to ask his advice, my mother isn’t much help in remembering much on the rabbit subject. she didn’t really care to eat it and thought it was some what a waste of time. I am enjoying learning again, and just recently moved back to our 7 generation family farm after living in a small town in close proximity to a somewhat large metropolis area for the past 30 years, so I have alot of homesteading to become reaquainted with.. the idea you mention of making methane sounds quite intriguing to me, I would like to hear more of your ideas on this subject.

  37. Thank you so much for the information looking forward to reading more

  38. Thanks I’m trying to get into organic gardening so I think your information will be very helpful

  39. Catherine Sommer

    The little wiggly things are white and kind of look like maggots. Is it ok to use?

  40. Thank you, thank you… This is the most clear and complete article about rabbit manure that I have ever read! 👏 👏 👏👏

  41. Wonderful, and detailed article. Thank you!

  42. Excellent,all I was hoping to find out about rabbit poop for my garden,+ some!
    (0:

  43. Michael Shitabule

    Thanks for quite an awesome writeup on rabbits farming. I am an ardent fan.

  44. Hi! Great article. Just started using bunny brew. I water my indoor plants lightly once a week. Last week my first bunny brew and WOW! My question is…can I use bunny brew weekly or should I maybe just do occasionally? Once a month? Thanks in advance!

  45. Bamwite wilberforce

    I have been very much encouraged to keep rabbits
    For both meat and manure for my plants.

  46. Last year something was eating my bean plants whole. We have a problem with wildlife in my neighborhood especially squirrels and birds, but we get the occasional dear. After I put down used rabbit litter (my rabbit’s use hay and woodstove pellets as litter) as mulch, nothing bugged the plants anymore, but I thought maybe it was a coincidence. This year I put some eggplant seed trays in the sun to help them germinate. I went back to get them and several of them had been eaten along with quite a bit of the dirt. If I do the bunny mulch again will this keep other animals away? Anyone else experience this at all?

  47. I have 4 house rabbit who use liter boxes. I use pine horse pellets for litter. With their hay racks above the litter boxes. I have been emptying hay/liter boxes in the corner of my yard, in a pile. I have never turned it. Can I use this as compost? Or does it have to be turned and or covered and watered?

    I live in east and it freezes here.

    Thanks
    Liseann

  48. Angie Roberts

    My rabbit goes in a litter box of cedar. Is it okay to dump the whole thing on my plants, urine and all? Or should I try to only use the poop? Tnanks!

  49. We have an inside bunny who goes in a little litter box type thing, but it has both poop and urine in it. With the urine cause problems if we use the whole box contents for fertilizer?

  50. How long does it take the bunnie time capsules to breakdown? I guess my question is how often should their pellets be used in the same location? Once per month? Every other month? Longer?
    Thanks

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