Hi,
My buck managed to escape, and I wasn't sure if he got one of my retired does, so after 34 days and no sign of pregnancys or any nesting I thought it was a near miss.
Nope, it wasn't. Today morning I found my 7yo Red with a kit dangling out, already ripped as she must have tried to pull it out. Panic read on the internet and tried to get it out by warming her vent area up and using oil - no way, the head was stuck in the hip. No contractions or anything. Also, there already was a pretty sour smell .
I know her chances of making it out of that alive are really slim, but I made an emergency appointment with my vet anyway, they were not any more successful in extracting the kit than I was and did surgery right away. Well, after pointing out that there isn't much hope, but I rather take the chance than putting her down without trying.
Just got a call that she survived the surgery so far, and they want to keep her there until she wakes up. So, there's some hope.
Would be a shame if her room mate, my 9yo black Fury, would have to live alone.
With rabbits way in the gray zone between pets and lifestock things get to me more than they should, I reckon.
My buck managed to escape, and I wasn't sure if he got one of my retired does, so after 34 days and no sign of pregnancys or any nesting I thought it was a near miss.
Nope, it wasn't. Today morning I found my 7yo Red with a kit dangling out, already ripped as she must have tried to pull it out. Panic read on the internet and tried to get it out by warming her vent area up and using oil - no way, the head was stuck in the hip. No contractions or anything. Also, there already was a pretty sour smell .
I know her chances of making it out of that alive are really slim, but I made an emergency appointment with my vet anyway, they were not any more successful in extracting the kit than I was and did surgery right away. Well, after pointing out that there isn't much hope, but I rather take the chance than putting her down without trying.
Just got a call that she survived the surgery so far, and they want to keep her there until she wakes up. So, there's some hope.
Would be a shame if her room mate, my 9yo black Fury, would have to live alone.
With rabbits way in the gray zone between pets and lifestock things get to me more than they should, I reckon.