This is a silly beginning, but it's a real question!
You know that brand of organic food, Annie's Organics? My kids love their Cheddar Bunnies crackers. Well, on the back of the box, the founder of the company (really named Annie) describes her start with rabbits. She says that her father, a teacher in the Northeast, used to teach English at a school in Mexico in the summers, and the family would go with him. Annie's job was to take care of the rabbits, 40 conejos, which she described as being kept in an adobe-walled area outside of the schoolhouse.
This intrigued me. Has anyone seen such a thing? Or tried earth structures as rabbit enclosures? Is this a traditional way of keeping rabbits?
Thanks for any info.
You know that brand of organic food, Annie's Organics? My kids love their Cheddar Bunnies crackers. Well, on the back of the box, the founder of the company (really named Annie) describes her start with rabbits. She says that her father, a teacher in the Northeast, used to teach English at a school in Mexico in the summers, and the family would go with him. Annie's job was to take care of the rabbits, 40 conejos, which she described as being kept in an adobe-walled area outside of the schoolhouse.
This intrigued me. Has anyone seen such a thing? Or tried earth structures as rabbit enclosures? Is this a traditional way of keeping rabbits?
Thanks for any info.