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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!udel!darwin.sura.net!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!ogicse!marty
- From: marty@atmos.ogi.edu (Marty Shearer)
- Newsgroups: rec.pets
- Subject: comments on recent bunny posts
- Keywords: bunny, spay, new rabbits
- Message-ID: <49035@ogicse.ogi.edu>
- Date: 25 Jan 93 23:37:26 GMT
- Article-I.D.: ogicse.49035
- Sender: news@ogicse.ogi.edu
- Followup-To: rec.pets
- Distribution: na
- Organization: Oregon Graduate Institute, Atmospheric Sciences, Beaverton, OR
- Lines: 41
-
- This is a comment on several recent bunny posts.
-
- First on a second rabbit:
- We introduced a second female to our slightly older female
- bunny Rosie last fall. We have a large outdoor hutch and a smaller
- (standard size) indoor cage, which easily holds two dwarf rabbits.
- We put our new bunny Butterscotch in the small cage, and put it inside
- the hutch. We exercised them separately in doors, always bringing
- Butterscotch inside when Rosie was hopping. After 3 days, Rosie
- would only lie next to the cage, so we tried taking them out
- together. They've been inseparable (except for the following story)
- ever since. They do use the same litter box without trouble, and
- are pretty reliable. I should say, however, that Rosie had always
- had a bunny friend (we lost one of our first bunnies in a vacation
- catastrophe), and she prefers bunnies to humans. She likes to play
- and can be affectionate, but she really grieved after her first
- friend died, and the main problem, I think, in introducing her to
- Butterscotch was that she was too excited.
-
- To spay or not to spay:
- A recent post-er asked about spaying his/her female bun, when
- he/she had no intention of breeding the bunny. I felt the same way -
- it was, after all, the reason I got two females- and frankly, the
- expense gave me pause also. It was fairly costly, mainly due to the
- anesthetic the vet used. Then Rosie went through a false pregnancy,
- and attacked Butterscotch so fiercely we had to separate them. She
- pulled a lot of fur off herself, but even more off Butterscotch, then
- bit and drove her away. She sat on her nest for a couple of days,
- then gradually returned to normal behavior, seeming a little puzzled,
- and we put them back together. Two weeks later, Butterscotch went
- through a false pregnancy, and I said, okay time to lose those
- hormones. They were spayed last week, are recovering well and eating
- and playing again. Don't know if that helps with any one else's
- decision, but unspayed females can get very confused. (P.S. we
- had to practically force feed those bunnies papaya tablets during
- those false pregnancies - they both showed signs of incipient hair
- balls.)
-
- Rosie, Butterscotch, and the food-bringer
-
-
-