If you are just interested in a unique rabbit for the pet market, and no plans to get really serious with show rabbits, I say go ahead with it. With a caveat that applies to ANY rabbit bred... what if you can't find pet homes for all of them? Are you comfortable with the idea of selling them for snake food or to raw feeders, or eating them yourself?
In the first few generations you are going to have a lot of rabbits with poor crowns and random ear sets. You wont get Rex fur until your F2 generation, but once you have two Rexed rabbits you will continue to get Rex fur. It wont be the best quality at first- my buck has long guard hairs that stick up- but it is recognizably Rex. Just poor quality Rex, lol!
I think the ears (crown) will be your biggest challenge, because Rex and Lops have very different head shapes.
Birds Buns N Bees":39yaa2gl said:
Certainly to me, it would be harder to justify spending a lot of time and effort creating a new breed if there's no hope of it ever being accepted by the ARBA.
That is a valid point, but not one that worries me personally at this time. In my case, my main reason for raising rabbits is for meat for my family. My Leonis Rex just come in fancy packaging! :mrgreen:
I can see at some point as I get more serious with my show rabbits scrapping the project due to cage space, and pure economics. Top of the line show rabbits sell for significantly more money than pet quality, and it costs the same amount of money to raise them.
Once my purebred lines are to the point that I can ask $200- $300 per head (which is not unheard of, especially at Convention and other big shows), the Leonis Rex project will be a significant loss of resources, even though they occupy only three holes currently. As BBnBees mentioned, they will never be anything more than a novelty rabbit that has no hope of becoming a recognized breed.
That said, the pure fun of my Leonis Rex project trumps economics, at least for now.