End of Year Rabbitry Reset: Small Changes, Big Wins in the New Year
As we close out the year and look ahead to what’s next, this is the perfect time to slow down, reflect, and reset. Whether you’re reading this, listening to the podcast at the bottom of the page, maybe doing chores in the cold, planning your next breeding cycle, or simply thinking about where your rabbitry is headed, this moment matters.
This isn’t about doing more. It’s about doing better.
This end-of-year message is for anyone who feels behind, overwhelmed, or unsure if their rabbitry is really working the way they hoped it would. You’re not alone—and the good news is that small, intentional changes can make the biggest impact in the year ahead.
Winter Is for Thinking, Not Chasing
Winter gives us something rare: space to think.
In colder climates, breeding slows or stops. In warmer regions, production finally stabilizes after the heat. Either way, this season invites us to step back and look at the fundamentals:
Are your systems helping—or hurting—you?
Are your rabbits healthy, clean, and predictable?
Is your operation supporting your life, or running it?
Rabbitry success doesn’t come from trends, social media hype, or adding more animals. It comes from boring consistency, good systems, and honest evaluation.
The Biggest Mistake: Adding More Instead of Fixing What’s Broken
One of the most common traps rabbit keepers fall into is thinking the answer is:
In reality, most rabbitries don’t need more—they need better systems.
If the foundation isn’t solid, adding animals only multiplies problems:
Bad cages fail faster
Dirty watering systems lead to sick rabbits
Stress increases—for you and the animals
A better system creates:
Build for Longevity (Not Convenience)
Cages, wire, and materials matter—especially where you live.
In humid or cold climates, budget cages often fail quickly. Once urine breaks through coated wire, rust spreads underneath, flakes off, and can even irritate your rabbits. Galvanized cage wire—especially 14-gauge for medium to large breeds—lasts longer, stays flatter, and stays cleaner.
This year, ask yourself:
What fails first every year?
What upgrade would reduce problems long-term?
You don’t have to replace everything at once. Even one cage per month adds up fast.
Clean Water = Healthy Rabbits
Many of the biggest health issues we see—digestive problems, poor growth, mysterious losses, weak litters—trace back to one thing:
Slimy tubes, neglected tanks, dirty bottles, and stagnant water create constant stress on your rabbits’ immune systems. Heat makes this worse. Freezing weather creates different challenges.
No season is perfect—but awareness and routine maintenance make all the difference.
Breeding Problems Are Usually Management Problems
One of the most common questions every year:
“Why won’t my doe breed?”
Most of the time, the answer isn’t genetics—it’s management:
Does bred too late
Poor timing
Lack of handling and inspection
Stress from heat or cold extremes
Healthy breeding comes from:
Starting does on time
Using experienced bucks when possible
Staying consistent with records
When rabbits are managed well, breeding becomes predictable instead of frustrating.
Stop Undervaluing Your Rabbits
Pricing rabbits is different everywhere—but one truth holds:
Lower prices do not build demand. Trust doe
s.
Buyers want confidence. Breeders need accountability.
You build trust by:
Keeping records
Being visible online
Showing consistency
Providing honest information
If you don’t value your work, no one else will.
The Power of Small, Repeatable Wins
Big goals often fail because they’re overwhelming. Small goals win because they’re repeatable.
Here are realistic ways to improve your rabbitry this year:
Replace one bad cage per month
Improve one system
Post once per week in one place
Cull intentionally
Clean one problem area thoroughly
Momentum comes from progress—not perfection.
Balance Is a System, Too
Many breeders burn out trying to do everything, all the time.
Sometimes the smartest decision isn’t pushing harder—it’s pulling back strategically:
These aren’t failures. They’re management decisions.
A rabbitry should support your life—not consume it.
Going Into the New Year
As the new year begins, don’t let negativity or comparison steal your motivation.
Instead:
Write down what you want to improve
Commit to small changes
Stay consistent
Bet on yourself
There are people out there who want what you’re building—but they can’t support you if they don’t know you exist.
Have the courage to share your work, your process, and your voice.
This next year doesn’t need to be louder.
It needs to be better built.
Here’s to a strong finish, a clear reset, and the best year yet for your rabbitry.
Want to go deeper?
If you’re looking for a step-by-step rabbitry curriculum that covers breeding, housing, feeding, record-keeping, and building income responsibly, I’ve put everything I’ve learned into a structured online course.













