[Ag-eq] Rabbits 101

nfoster at extremezone.com nfoster at extremezone.com
Fri Jan 24 01:05:03 UTC 2014


Jewel:

I kept rabbits as pets for years.  They were a lot of fun and quite easy to care
for.

The last 2 I had were dwarfs and were under 4 pounds.  They had a large indoor
hutch with 3 levels and an outdoor enclosed area.  I also kept a cage for them
at my parents, so they could go with me when I visited.  I transported them in
a cat carrier.  They were affectionate and liked sitting on my lap like a cat. 
I kept one of my rabbits when I lived in an apartment.  She had an indoor hutch
and did get some free time in the house.  I also could put a harness and leash
on her so she could explore the lawn at our complex.

Their poop makes really good fertilizer.  If you are into fiber arts the angora
rabbits have great hair.

I've often thought that rabbits might be good pets for me when I'm a little old
lady!

It's best if you have the males nuetered or they will try to mark things.  They
also need things to chew on; their teeth grow kind of like our nails, so need
to be worn down.  I also used to get their nails clipped by my vet.  They like
most vegetables, grass, hay and the pellets.  Mine loved apples for treats.

I think you will have a lot of fun with your rabbit.  They can get territorial,
so introducing new rabbits can be tricky.

Please keep us posted.

Nella




Quoting Jewel <jewelblanch at kinect.co.nz>:

>
>
>
>
> 3 weeks ago:  was it only 3 weeks?  seems much much longer than that:  I got
> 2 2 month old Flemish
> Giant rabbits.  Peter, the smaller of the 2 was so gentle while Paul, his
> brother, thought that it
> would be fun to bite Jewel, but he found that biting  Jewel was not as funny
> as he thought it was
> going to be.
> Now all that was on Thursday, Jan 6th, and on the following Tuesday morning,
> they were both gone
> from the little
> shed that I had them in.
> I reckoned that Guideon had climbed the security gate, which he had never
> done before and had got
> into the shed by scrambling over the bottom half of the double door and had
> killed them:  not that
> there was any sign of him having done so:  no blood or tufts of rabbit fur or
> bunny bits, except
> that I found one of the cat collars that they wore in the hay shed where
> Guideon had made a day bed
> for himself, but his bread basket [tum tum] did feel fuller than it should
> have done at that time of
> the day,   and, to my fevered brain,  that "fuller", felt like dish de jour
> Fricassee Rabbit De
> Luxe!
> Now it was on the Monday night/early Tuesday morning that they  disappeared,
> but when I was talking
> on Thursday morning to Sam, my honorary shepherd and pastor of the Grace
> Church which shares a
> boundary with the BlanchRanch, he said that he had seen a black
> rabbit: Peter:  hopping around in the paddock somewhere around Tuesday
> morning.
> Steve Ewing who lives 2 properties from me in Oxford Street but just through
> the fence of my
> Hamilton Street garden returned Paul to me having found him in his section on
> Friday.  However,
> Peter was still
> missing.
> Guideon had not killed the rabbits with the help of happenstance that worked
> to the rabbits'
> advantage, but it was not, I
> suspect, for lack of will on his part.
> What I think happened was that as he scrambled over the bottom half of the
> stable door, it had leant
> inward, and the bottom of the door which was hinged to a very rotten frame
> had pulled free and
> opened a gap, and a gap at eye level was all they. the rabbits meeded and
> they beat a hasty retreat.
> Over the few days since Paul's return, he had changed his ways and become a
> very nice pet.
> I put a hot wire above the security gate so that if Guideon tried to climb it
> again, he would get a
> nasty welcome at the top, which, I think, may have happened yesterday morning
> as I heard him give a
> startled shout, and when I checked the hot wire, it, definitely, had been
> disturbed, so I replaced
> it with a piece of steel rod rather than a strand of wire.
> Yesterday, Jan 22nd, my sister, Deslie and I were to visit, my good friend,
> Kirstan in Winton and I
> intended to take
> Paul because I
> thought that she would like to meet him.  However, when I went to get him, I
> found that the was
> another gap at the bottom of the door, and Paul had gone.  I could not hold
> Guideon responsible this
> time because there was no way that he could have made that gap.  It was as
> though :Paul had pushed
> the door until it had moved sufficiently far from the jamb to create that
> gap, but he was only a
> baby Flemish Giant, and, although such an action may, just may, have been
> possible if done by a
> fully-grown FG, I cannot see a rabbit of Paul's present size being able to do
> it.
> Kirstan says she has a feeling that I will get Paul back, but she also had a
> feeling that I was
> going to win big on Keno, and I didn't/haven't, so I don't have too much
> faith in her * prophetic
> feelings!
> Jan 23 11:10pm:  Oh me"  of little faith!  Kirstan!  forgive me, if you find
> it possible within you
> to do so, for Paul was returned tonight by
> the same chap who caught him in the same place as he had before, thanks, in
> some degree to his
> sharp-eyed cat.
> Steve and Eryn, his wife, had been attending a wedding but by good luck, or
> divine intervention:
> take your
> pick! They returned home earlier than had been planned and heard the message
> that I had left with
> their call minder.
> When Steve went out the back, he noticed his cat staring,
> fixedly at something in a bush, and that something was Paul.
> I have barricaded the door of Paul's sleeping quarters to the extent that one
> could be forgiven if
> the
> thought went through his/her mind that I was keeping a serial killer under
> lock and key.
> Hopefully, Paul's adventures are at an end, but the batteries on my electric
> fence energiser have
> gone flat so, until I get them replaced, Master Guideon's movements are going
> to be, somewhat,
> curtailed.
> There is, to date, no sign of Peter so, I fear, his days of freedom may have
> come to an untimely
> end, or, on the other hand, he may have been found by a charming girl angel,
> "now Jewel! we will
> have no sex stereotyping around here!"  OK!  boy angel--girl angel--what the
> hell: who pestered and
> pleaded until his/her weary parents said "alright already!  Anything for a
> quiet life!   Keep the
> damned
> rabbit, but remember, the pest is yours and if you don't look
> after it, you will find Fricassee of Rabbit De Luxe :in your school lunch !"
> Oh no Jewel!  Don't even think such dreadful thoughts!
>   No parents would be that unkind:  would  they?
> It occurred to me that in retirement homes and villages where the keeping of
> pets:  pets being cats
> and dogs: is not allowed, keeping a rabbit as a companion animal [pet] would
> fill the bill for many
> of the residents who are feeling lonely having had companion animals when
> they were in their own
> homes.
> Rabbits do make wonderful pets, they can be enclosed:  I have had a stumble
> or 2 on that path, but
> don't measure me as being representative of the ease of enclosing a bunny:
> they do not smell:  they
> do not make a noise:  and they don't drag dead animals and other unwanted
> refuse to your back door!
>
>         Jewel
>
>
>
>
>
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