Skip to content

Stainless Steel Bottom!
Bunny Poo-wer!

Language
Country/region
Search
Cart
The Secret Gold for Your Garden

The Secret Gold for Your Garden

Yes, we said it. Poo. But not just any poo — bunny poo.
If you’ve got a rabbit at home, you’re sitting on a goldmine (well… kind of literally).


Fun Fact: Bunny Poo is Gold Cold

Unlike chicken poop, bunny poo are “cold manure”, meaning it won’t burn your plants — even if you use it fresh. No composting needed. Just collect, sprinkle, and grow!


🌱 Why Bunny Poo Rocks

  • Packed with nutrients: High in nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium — the magic trio for plant growth.

  • Pellet-perfect: Those neat little cocoa puff-shaped poos break down slowly, feeding your plants over time.

  • No smell, no slime: Dry, odorless, and totally garden-friendly.

  • Sustainable: It turns waste into life. Literally.


💡 How to Use Bunny Poo in Your Garden

  1. Drop & Grow
    Scatter bunny poo straight onto your soil or into potted plants. Great for herbs, flowers, and veggies.

  2. Brew Poo Tea ☕🌿
    Steep it in water for a few days (like compost tea), and use the “poo water” to nourish your plants. We call it Poo-wer Tea.

  3. Mix with Soil
    Blend into raised beds or mix into seed-starting soil for extra nutrition.


🌍 What Do Farms & Gardeners Do With It?

🐇 Bunny farms and eco-gardeners often:

  • Sell bunny poo locally as fertilizer (yes, it sells!)

  • Use it to enrich compost piles

  • Partner with urban gardens for poo-donations

  • Start community compost stations just for rabbit waste

Some even market it as "Bunny Honey" (adorable, right?).


🧼 But Wait, What About Hygiene?

We’re talking poo, not pee. That’s where the Lavieloo Litterbox comes in.
It separates waste so you can scoop clean, dry droppings. Perfect for plants!


🌟 Join the Bunny Poo-wer Movement

Don’t toss it — grow with it. Whether you’ve got a full backyard garden or just a windowsill pot, your bun can be your co-gardener.

What if your rabbit’s poo became your garden’s magic?

Let us know:
What have YOU grown with bunny poo? Share your stories with #BunnyPoower!