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Enriching your pet's daily life starts with supporting natural behaviors such as exploring, playing, hiding, and chewing. Oxbow Enriched Life is designed with these natural behaviors in mind and is constructed from 100% pet-safe materials, allowing you to nurture your pet's mind and body is safe and fun ways every day.
SKU | 3213087 |
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Primary Brand | Oxbow |
Days to Ship | Ships Next Business Day |
Weight | .1 LB |
Grain Free | No |
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Personalized Item flag | No |
Length | 1.18 IN |
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Height | 7.68 IN |
Width | 5.25 IN |
Yes, I recommend this product.
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Hi, I have two chinchillas which are not eating their hay as often as before. They are perfectly fine, eating their pellets, excited for treats, drinking water, curious and their poop is fine. Any ideas on why and how to get them to eat hay again. The hay is Timothy Hay and made by Oxbow
My guinea pig blue passed a large poop today & when he did he squeaked. They have been eating OXBOW Timothy hay for a year now but the quality in the hay has changed & they stopped eating it they picked out the fuzzy pieces so they haven't been getting the amount of hay they should be for around 1 month, someone said try OXBOW orchard & he's been eating it like a "pig", could not really having hay-having hay & eating lots DO THIS? he only passed 1 big poop & only squeaked then , now all normal
What does Oxbow Critical Care do, What is it exactly?
Can a bunny eat the same type of hay all the time or does it need to be change every once in a while
What is the best bedding for my rabbit
My dwarf rabbit has developed "wet poops" recently rather than the usual Dry hard "berries", diet is green hay, spring mix lettuce dark colored, small Amounts of apple and blueberry (1 or 2 oz./ day) and small spoon rolled oats as treats; also a handful of hay pellets in 2 lots daily; 3 years old, rabbit has been Very healthy thus far; would you recommend diet adjustments; what share should be just hay?
When I first got my rabbit, I fed it unlimited pellets, but then I realised that they need unlimited hay. They are immune to pellets and don't eat hay even if I remove pellets from their diets
What can I feed my bunny if I want to treat him?
I just read an article about sulcata tortoise care hoping to gain more information about what the best things to feed them are and saw that one of them is grass hay. Would that be the type of hay you normally feed guinea pigs?
My chinchilla is very active and is drinking and eating an abundant amount. The problem is I used to feed her pellets that contained treats which would make her eat only the treats first. I've been transitioning to oxbow which is a lot better for her, but she still forages for the treats from her old food. I hear a little gas, and her tummy is a little hard. I fear she has bloating. What should I do? (PS the only treats I give her for training are a tsp amount of oatmeal and rose petals)
I bought new hay the other day, a different brand and a different type of hay. (I normally get oxbow orchard grass hay) the next day I noticed that their poop is a dry caramel color. Today I'm noticing a lot more darker with caramel color. Could it be that they don't like the brand? Also I notice them only picking out the grassy parts of the hay and the fuzzy tops. Them not eating enough of this hay is that the reason for their change in poop color? I plan to switch back in a few days.
What should I focus on feeding my young male bunny Easton???