Spring is creeping in whether the mud asked permission or not.
You can smell it. The thaw. The wet earth. The faint panic of people realizing they forgot to start seeds.
Meanwhile, the rabbits have been working all winter.
Every single pellet they drop is basically pre-digested plant matter — finely processed fiber, nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium. No composting burn risk. No waiting six months. You can top-dress straight into the garden.
Cold-weather produced. Wire-screened. Sun-cured. Farm-fresh.
People will spend $40 a bag on “organic premium garden booster” while standing next to a barn producing literal black gold for free.
Rabbit manure is a cold manure — meaning it won’t scorch plants like chicken litter can. That makes it ideal for:
• Early spring bed prep
• Transplant shock reduction
• Container mixes
• Top dressing perennials
• Seed starting blends
Your tomatoes don’t care about marketing labels. They care about nutrient availability and soil biology.
And here’s the fun part — rabbit manure isn’t just NPK numbers. It feeds soil microbes. That’s the hidden engine. Healthy microbial life unlocks nutrients that are already sitting in your soil doing absolutely nothing.
You want living soil, not dirt.
We raise rabbits. They raise gardens.
Spring is here. Your soil is hungry. Let’s feed it properly.