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    Dwarf Hotot rabbit feeding bowl and water bottle

    This is a specific conversation about Rabbit supplies — what you actually need — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Rabbits are genuinely complex animals — they need space to move, hay as about 80% of their diet, companionship, and real enrichment. Getting the setup right from the start makes a huge difference to their health and behaviour. Dwarf Hotots in particular are tiny, and standard rabbit feeding gear is often comically oversized for them — a heavy ceramic bowl they can barely reach the rim of, or a bottle with a flow rate designed for a much bigger animal. Before I point you to something specific, can I ask: how many rabbits do you have, are they indoor or outdoor, and is it just the bowl and bottle you're after, or is there other kit you're building up too?
    Just the one Dwarf Hotot, she lives indoors. I've got most things sorted but the bowl I have is way too big and heavy for her — she can barely tip her head into it. And the water bottle I tried leaked everywhere. So yes, mainly those two things.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a really common problem with Dwarf Hotots — they're one of the smallest rabbit breeds there is, usually under a kilogram, and most feeding accessories are sized for larger rabbits or even guinea pigs. A bowl she has to strain into isn't just inconvenient, it can actually put her off eating pellets properly, and a leaky bottle is a mess as well as a hydration risk. Can I ask how you're attaching or positioning the water bottle at the moment — is it on cage bars, a hutch front, or are you free-standing it somehow?
    She's in an indoor pen with mesh sides, so I can clip something to the bars. The old bottle just kept dripping and soaking the bedding.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — bar-mounted works really well for keeping things stable and off the floor. For the bowl, I'd go with the Rosewood Boredom Breaker Small Animal Ceramic Dish — it's a shallow, wide-based ceramic bowl that sits low to the ground, which suits a tiny rabbit perfectly. The weight of the ceramic stops her flipping it, but the low profile means she's not straining her neck. It's available in a small size that's genuinely appropriate for a Dwarf Hotot rather than just labelled 'small' and still being enormous. For the bottle, the Savic Picobello 150ml sipper bottle is the one I'd recommend — it's specifically designed for small animals, has a reliable ball-bearing valve that doesn't drip, and clips securely to mesh or bar fronts. The 150ml size is right for a single small rabbit; she'll drink it fresh before it sits around. Those two together should solve both problems cleanly.
    View Rosewood Boredom Breaker on Amazon
    That sounds good. Is ceramic better than plastic for the bowl? I've seen both.
    inparticular.ai
    Yes, for a rabbit ceramic is meaningfully better — it's heavier so it doesn't get batted around, it doesn't harbour bacteria the way scratched plastic does, and it's easier to clean thoroughly. Plastic bowls develop tiny surface scratches over time that hold residue even after washing. For a small rabbit who's eating from the same bowl daily, ceramic is the cleaner long-term choice. The Rosewood ceramic dish is also dishwasher safe, which makes life easier. Stick with ceramic and you won't need to replace it.
    Great, I'll go with those two. Thanks.
    inparticular.ai
    You're all set. The Rosewood ceramic dish and Savic Picobello 150ml bottle are a solid, properly scaled pairing for a Dwarf Hotot. One small tip — when you first introduce the bottle, check she's actually drinking from it within the first day or two. Most rabbits figure it out quickly, but occasionally a very small rabbit needs a moment with a new valve style. If she seems hesitant, a tiny smear of pellet dust around the spout usually does it.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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