We don't really have any nearby veterinaries who will treat rabbits so it's not been much of a direct issue with the herd here. However, there's been a huge demand for rabbits this year and we are sending more of them out to new homes. They all fly since there's no other way to get them to their new homes.
This year, I've gotten reports back of rabbits doing an emergency trip to the vet. The vet says they have multiple infections, they went into cardiac arrest, they are on an IV drip, etc. etc. One of the new owners reported that the vet said the rabbit was underfed and malnourished as well. This was a six month old doe who had just been sheared the day before so she would be able to fly without a heavy angora coat on her. I had my hands all over that rabbit - the day before! - and it wasn't 'underfed and malnourished'. Let alone the other six 'diseases' he 'found' on the rabbit. The new owner took the rabbit to the vet for a 'wellness check' (the day after it arrived because it didn't want to eat the petshop 'treat' they were trying to feed it) and they got a laundry list of problems from the vet. That wasn't an unhealthy rabbit! However, they are a vet and I'm just an un-certified person, so my word and experience means nothing.
How has everyone else's experiences at the vet gone? Is this typical that rabbits get diagnosed with all sorts of things?
When the person called to tell me about the problems with the rabbit, there were screaming kids and a barking dog in the background. Made me cringe and I wasn't even there. It's pretty quiet here so how much of the problems with the rabbit would be stress and shock from the changed situation the rabbit found itself in?
What can be done to get rabbits relocated without new owners taking them off to the vet for 'wellness checks' and 'emergency' visits when the rabbit doesn't want to immediately eat whatever it is they're offering it? I'm thinking a lot of this is issues with the owner being nervous, but it's hard on the rabbits, too.
This year, I've gotten reports back of rabbits doing an emergency trip to the vet. The vet says they have multiple infections, they went into cardiac arrest, they are on an IV drip, etc. etc. One of the new owners reported that the vet said the rabbit was underfed and malnourished as well. This was a six month old doe who had just been sheared the day before so she would be able to fly without a heavy angora coat on her. I had my hands all over that rabbit - the day before! - and it wasn't 'underfed and malnourished'. Let alone the other six 'diseases' he 'found' on the rabbit. The new owner took the rabbit to the vet for a 'wellness check' (the day after it arrived because it didn't want to eat the petshop 'treat' they were trying to feed it) and they got a laundry list of problems from the vet. That wasn't an unhealthy rabbit! However, they are a vet and I'm just an un-certified person, so my word and experience means nothing.
How has everyone else's experiences at the vet gone? Is this typical that rabbits get diagnosed with all sorts of things?
When the person called to tell me about the problems with the rabbit, there were screaming kids and a barking dog in the background. Made me cringe and I wasn't even there. It's pretty quiet here so how much of the problems with the rabbit would be stress and shock from the changed situation the rabbit found itself in?
What can be done to get rabbits relocated without new owners taking them off to the vet for 'wellness checks' and 'emergency' visits when the rabbit doesn't want to immediately eat whatever it is they're offering it? I'm thinking a lot of this is issues with the owner being nervous, but it's hard on the rabbits, too.