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Happy St Patrick's Day!
🍀 A Little Luck for BunClub Members 🍀 Since it’s St. Patrick’s week and the barn was warm enough today to get some work done, I figured we’d share a bit of the luck. Right now all Premium course content is temporarily unlocked ( now till 3-19-26) for everyone in BunClub. That means you can jump in and explore the deeper modules on: 🐇 Quick overview topics on Rabbit nutrition science 🐇 Housing and welfare Deeper Dives 🐇 Archived tiktok videos and documentaries 🐇 The research behind a lot of the myths we’ve been tackling Normally those sections are Premium-only, but they’re open to all members until March 19, 2026. So if you’ve been curious about what’s inside the deeper modules, now’s the time to take a look. 📚 Start here: Check out the locked sections in Classroom while they’re open and see what we’re building inside BunClub. These posts include the research studies and go deeper then what's on the community pages . And since it’s St. Patrick’s Day week… Drop a 🍀 in the comments if you’ve already started one of the unlocked modules. I’m also curious: What topic should the next deep-dive cover? • Rabbit nutrition myths • Housing & welfare science • Feed formulation • Breeding program design Let me know 👇
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Happy St Patrick's Day!
Let’s Talk Sh*t.
Rabbit manure is classified as a cold manure. That means it can be applied directly to garden beds without composting first. It’s relatively low in ammonia, so it won’t burn plant roots like fresh poultry or cattle manure can. Typical nutrient range (varies by diet, but consistent overall): • Nitrogen (N): ~2–2.5% • Phosphorus (P): ~1–1.5% • Potassium (K): ~0.5–1% Balanced. Slow-release. Plant-available over time. Rabbit manure is processed plant material. Pelleted. Uniform. Easy to handle. As it breaks down, it feeds soil microbes — bacteria and fungi that drive nutrient cycling in living soil. It also: • Adds organic matter • Improves soil structure • Breaks down quickly • Doesn’t require aging like “hot” manure • Is relatively dry and low odor Now let’s zoom out. Rabbits eat pellets. They make manure. The garden needs manure. You eat the vegetables. The extra manure goes back into the feed bags to sell to buy feed , and the cycle keeps turning. That’s not trendy sustainability marketing. That’s a closed-loop system. We’re not selling anything here (althoughwe do sell on the farm ;) . Just acknowledging that sometimes the most valuable thing on a farm is the thing everyone pretends not to notice. Still talking sh*t. Just scientifically.
Let’s Talk Sh*t.
What your missing on Bunclub Premium
If you don’t already have a Premium account… this is what you’re missing. These aren’t surface-level “rabbit tips.” Each topic is a deeper dive — genetics, nutrition, housing, health, show evaluation, myth-busting. Most posts already include: • Full videos • Educational shorts • Infographics • Reference photos • Linked studies and research papers And I’m still adding more as data allows. This is the archive. This is the long-form breakdown. This is where we actually unpack things instead of repeating blog-level advice. If you’re serious about breeding, feeding, showing, or just understanding rabbits beyond pet-store talking points — Premium is where that happens. Come dig deeper. This can be accessed under the Classroom tab.
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What your missing on Bunclub Premium
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