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QuestionHow do you keep baby rats warm?Brian Starr is a Rat Specialist and Breeder and the Owner of OC Dumbos out of Central Florida. As America’s only breeder of pet Roof Rats, Brian and OC Dumbos specialize in rat breeding, training, and care. Years of experience and several generations of careful breeding have allowed Brian and OC Dumbos to create a line of tame Roof Rats, bred to make friendly, fun pets. In addition to offering rat accessories and training resources, OC Dumbos also offers free Roof Rat adoptions.Set your baby rats on a heating pad, which you can set to 90° F (32.2° C). Unfortunately, baby rats won't survive if they get too cold.
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QuestionWhat do you feed newborn rats?Brian Starr is a Rat Specialist and Breeder and the Owner of OC Dumbos out of Central Florida. As America’s only breeder of pet Roof Rats, Brian and OC Dumbos specialize in rat breeding, training, and care. Years of experience and several generations of careful breeding have allowed Brian and OC Dumbos to create a line of tame Roof Rats, bred to make friendly, fun pets. In addition to offering rat accessories and training resources, OC Dumbos also offers free Roof Rat adoptions.Ideally, it's best to let the rat's mom take care of this. If the rat is a rescue, feed it either goat's milk or puppy milk (a variety of goat's milk made for puppies). Stay away from cat milk—it has too much protein and not enough fat.
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QuestionHow do you feed a baby rat without its mother?Brian Starr is a Rat Specialist and Breeder and the Owner of OC Dumbos out of Central Florida. As America’s only breeder of pet Roof Rats, Brian and OC Dumbos specialize in rat breeding, training, and care. Years of experience and several generations of careful breeding have allowed Brian and OC Dumbos to create a line of tame Roof Rats, bred to make friendly, fun pets. In addition to offering rat accessories and training resources, OC Dumbos also offers free Roof Rat adoptions.Fill a little dropper or syringe with goat or puppy milk. Then, drop the milk onto the rat's lips, watching closely to make sure the rat is drinking it. Make sure the milk doesn't touch your rat's nose, or else it could get pneumonia.
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QuestionWhat should I do with baby rats that are still with their mom?Brian Starr is a Rat Specialist and Breeder and the Owner of OC Dumbos out of Central Florida. As America’s only breeder of pet Roof Rats, Brian and OC Dumbos specialize in rat breeding, training, and care. Years of experience and several generations of careful breeding have allowed Brian and OC Dumbos to create a line of tame Roof Rats, bred to make friendly, fun pets. In addition to offering rat accessories and training resources, OC Dumbos also offers free Roof Rat adoptions.If you've got the mom, then let the rats stay with the mom. You don't want to disturb the babies until their eyes are open. Before that, the mom will take much better care of those babies than anyone else could. You also really have to fight the temptation to interfere with what the mom is doing. Sometimes, if the mom has too many babies, she'll actually separate the babies into separate piles. And she might even have some of the babies outside of the nesting area that you provided for her because she can't physically feed them all at the same time. But she knows what she's doing.
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