Originally Posted by
astra
For how many squirrels is this recipe?
The monthly “dose” of Henry’s vitamins for 1 squirrel is 33g. And 80 g of protein for 1 sq as well.
In this modified recipe 100g of vitamins is for 3 sqs (100 divided by 33)? But then almost 130g + of protein per sq? (If 400g of protein divided by 3). That’s way too much protein for one squirrel, too much protein may be heavy on kidneys etc.
and looks like way too much nuts.
People do tend to modify recipes here slightly, but this seems way too off, imho.
If you have a flying squirrel, then they get extra protein, but how much protein per day they need - flyer ppl will know.
The original recipe works just fine - it's very simple: 33g of vits, 80g of protein, 130g of nuts, 1 egg, baking powder and optional flour/oat bran. That's it - for one sq for one month. Imho it's better to add if not flour, then at least oat bran or something because without that it's like baked protein with nuts, may not be very palatable. But again - some ppl used the recipe without the optional flour and their sqs preferred it that way.
The pic you posted above - they look just fine as well.
It’s important to keep in mind that, 1st off, if a sq never ate them, it will take some time to get used to; 2ndly squirrels tend to be picky and it’s almost always a battle of wills; 3rdly, sqs go through phases, and they alternate periods of eating well with periods of not eating well, they tend to eat the least in late Fall- early winter due to hard-wired instincts.
If necessary, it is totally fine to turn the prepared block into balls, but imho modifying the original recipe so drastically may not be a good idea as too much protein isn’t good (unless it’s flyers who have somewhat different protein needs).
A few words on the recipe posted above from 2011. It’s slightly old: right now one-month supply of vitamins is 33g, no longer 45g.
Wheat flour is optional and can be replaced with oat bran, buckwheat flour etc.
One thing - unless you are making it for babies, you don’t want to put too much water. As it says in the recipe, water isn’t added to the adult recipe. However, if you replace wheat flour with oat bran, which is higher in fiber, you may need to add a bit of water because whole grain/high fiber flours absorb more liquid. Also depending on your altitude you may have to add or not add water. So that’s one thing you can experiment with to find what works for you.
If you feel your batter is too crumbly, start adding little water, say, a TBS at a time: add one and see if it helps, if it doesn’t, then add another. Too much water may make it feel like wet clay. If your batter felt very, very, very sticky, like wet clay sticky (or dough that's too sticky) - most likely, too much water. It shouldn't be that "wet dough/clay" type of sticky. Of course, it will be somewhat sticky when you first start mixing it like any batter, but not excessively and then the initial stickiness goes away. As you need it, the ground nuts will release oil, so it may get oily, but not wet. Maybe, too much water was the problem that made it feel very sticky for you?
But even if you put too much water, that won’t change the resultant blocks’ nutritional content, ie., they are still nutritionally good. Just to make them more palatable to him, you can grind them into a ball, but keep additions to the minimum so as not to mask the block taste too much because you want him to get used to it.
The basic idea for balls: grind block finely, add some moisture (some use unsweetened baby food, but plain water will do) to make it the consistency of damp sand, then add something nutty: either finely ground nuts or natural nut butter. You want both moisture and nutty substance just enough for the ground block to hold together and add some extra nutty flavour. If you make them a few times, you’ll find the ratio that works for you.
What some ppl do is with each batch of block they gradually reduce the nutty filler to make the sq get used to the block taste.
Just if you do decide to grind them into balls, keep track of how many blocks you grind so as to keep the daily block requirement (2 HHBs for a grey).
So, imho however you decide to experiment with the original recipe, it may be best to keep the vitamins and protein at the suggested quantities of 33g and 80g respectively per one squirrel per month.