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- From: milligan@carson.u.washington.edu (Paula Milligan)
- Newsgroups: rec.pets
- Subject: Re: Featherstonehaugh: the ballistic bunny
- Date: 31 Dec 1992 00:47:57 GMT
- Organization: University of Washington, Seattle
- Lines: 42
- Sender: Paula Milligan
- Message-ID: <1htfvtINNhni@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- References: <1hst62INN21b@shelley.u.washington.edu> <1992Dec30.195603.29673@cas.org>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: carson.u.washington.edu
- Summary: Getting Bunny to accept petting
-
- In article <1992Dec30.195603.29673@cas.org> jac54@cas.org () writes:
- >
- > Yet more bunny stories. Featherstonehaugh is our house
- > rabbit, he's just under 4 years old and has very high
- > petting requirements. Usually he avoids me, because I am
- > the one who does nasty things like medicate and trim
- > nails and hold him at the vets, and prefers to go to my wife
- > to have his forehead rubbed.
- > start nuzzling up to my unshod feet, which is quite pleasnt,
- > but he will not let me rub his forehead. If I ignore him,
- > he nips the offending foot, if I try to pet him, he scoots off.
- > Does anyone have an explanation for this, or is it just the
- > old "I'm a bunny, you can't win" ?
- >
- > Alec
- >
-
- When I am trying to accustom a shy bunny to petting (shy for whatever
- reason), I use a sort of sign language, accompanied by the word (posed
- in the form of a question), "Pets?" meaning, "would you like some
- pets?" What I have found is that they seem to be rather threatened
- (sometimes) by a hand swooping down over their heads. My Betsy, who
- must have had a terrible life before I got her, is still skittish
- if I don't ask her first. I put my hand on the floor _near_ her nose,
- with my forefinger extended, as though I were pointing up and slightly
- tilted toward her, then I say, "pets?" and she runs over and lowers
- her head so I can pet her. I think if you try this a few times, he
- will be curious about what it is you are doing, and if you keep your
- finger near the floor while you stroke his nose, he will begin to
- understand that you aren't going to grab him and take him to the
- vet, or do those other horrid things he doesn't like. As long as
- you never use that method to grab him, I think he will begin to
- trust you.
-
- I learned that, BTW, from the local HRS bunny foster mom. She used
- that method to begin a line of communication with a rescue rabbit
- the previous owners had named "Rotten." She discovered that the
- rabbit was deaf, and as soon as this method of communication was
- introduced to her, she went from being a frightened, growling,
- clawing bunny to a very loving one. Sandi renamed her "Phyllis."
-
-
-