A printable daily log for catching rabbit health problems early
Fill in one row per day. Watch for any drop in eating, drinking, or poop output.
| Date | Eating (hay / pellets / greens) | Drinking | Poop (size & amount) | Energy / Behavior | Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Droppings are the single best daily window into rabbit gut health. Compare what you see against this guide.
| What You See | What It Usually Means |
|---|---|
| Many round, dry, evenly sized droppings | Normal gut motility, good fiber intake |
| Fewer, small, or misshapen droppings | Slowing gut, early GI stasis warning. Watch closely and offer hay |
| No droppings for 12+ hours | EMERGENCY. Call the exotic vet now |
| Droppings strung together with fur | Molt-related slowdown. Increase hay, water, and grooming |
| Soft, mushy, or true diarrhea | Abnormal. Contact your vet, especially in young rabbits |
Record anything unusual: teeth grinding (pain), hunched posture, head tilt, drooling, runny eyes or nose, or changes in litter habits.
This log is an aid for monitoring, not a substitute for veterinary care. Rabbits hide illness well and decline fast. When in doubt, contact a rabbit-savvy exotic veterinarian.