Measure pellets instead of free-pouring them. The right amount depends on your rabbit's age, size, body condition, hay intake, and vet guidance, so use the scoop as a routine to review, not a forever number.
Food questions are easiest when you picture the whole feeding corner, not just one bowl. Start with the specific food choice, then watch hay interest, water, appetite, and litter-box output as the routine changes.
Pellet portions: Measure before you pour
Measure pellets instead of free-pouring them. The right amount depends on your rabbit's age, size, body condition, hay intake, and vet guidance, so use the scoop as a routine to review, not a forever number. Pellets work best when the serving is visible and repeatable, not free-poured during a busy morning.
Use the same scoop and watch the rabbit in front of you: age, body condition, hay intake, appetite, and vet guidance all matter.
Use that as the baseline for the pellet serving: if tomorrow's hay, water, appetite, and litter box still look normal, the routine is moving in the right direction. Do not judge the idea only by the first excited meal; the next normal morning matters more.
Pellet portions: Keep hay ahead of pellet time
Refresh hay before pellets when pellets are stealing the spotlight. A rabbit who arrives excited for the bowl should still settle into hay afterward.
If hay keeps getting ignored, the pellet routine may need to become smaller, slower, or less dramatic.
Keep this part visible in the room. A rabbit's real answer shows up in what they choose when nobody is nudging them toward the bowl. If you have to keep rescuing the setup, the placement or portion probably needs to become simpler.
Pellet portions: Use pellets for small enrichment
A measured serving can go in a bowl, scatter, or simple forage toy depending on your rabbit's confidence.
Changing the delivery can slow the rush without changing the amount.
Make one small note if you are adjusting the pellet serving: amount offered, where it sat, and whether hay was eaten afterward. That tiny record keeps you from changing the scoop, placement, and timing all at once.
Pellet portions: Watch the bowl and litter box
Leftovers, frantic begging, smaller poops, or a rabbit who only wants pellets are all useful clues.
The goal is not a perfect bowl routine. It is a rabbit who eats hay well, leaves normal poops, and handles pellets calmly.
The litter box is not glamorous, but it is honest. Normal round poops make the food decision easier to trust. Check it before you forget the meal, because the next handful of hay and the next few poops tell the truth.
Pellet portions: Adjust the scoop when life changes
Young rabbits, seniors, weight changes, dental concerns, and lower activity can all change what a sensible pellet routine looks like.
Review the serving with a rabbit-savvy vet when body condition, appetite, or poop patterns shift.
If this makes the day harder to repeat, simplify. Rabbit feeding should feel calm enough for an ordinary weekday. The best routine is not the most elaborate one; it is the one you can repeat without crowding out hay.
Before you decide
Is hay available and being eaten?
Did only one food change at a time?
Are poops normal after the change?
Is water easy to reach and clean?
Next best moves
Keep hay visible and easy.
Change greens, pellets, or treats slowly.
Use food changes as enrichment without crowding out hay.
Feeding tools that keep hay in charge
These are practical pieces for the routine, not clutter to buy all at once.
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Measure pellets instead of free-pouring them. The right amount depends on your rabbit's age, size, body condition, hay intake, and vet guidance, so use the scoop as a routine to review, not a forever number.
How fast should I change the routine?
Change one food detail at a time and keep hay steady. That makes appetite and poop changes easier to understand.
What if my rabbit stops eating?
Do not treat that like ordinary pickiness. If your rabbit stops eating or pooping, call a rabbit-savvy vet promptly.