CaffeinatedBunnies
Active member
A mildly amusing tale about my new rabbits; four NZWs which apparently came from a research herd and were used a source of material for synthesis of amino acids.
The day I arrived at the rabbitry I found all the NZWs to be docile and friendly, eager to come over and say hello. I was pretty happy about this as my first up close view of rabbit teeth instantly convinced me I wanted nothing to do with them on an unfriendly basis. After finishing my very amateurish impression of some one examining rabbits I selected three does and loaded them and the buck (selected by the owner) into the transport cages and headed home.
The next couple days showed some nervousness in the does but that seemed to settle out quickly and was followed by more friendly, inquisitive behavior. It turns out that was all a cunning bunny lie, designed to lure me into a false sense of security by the ring-leader, the biggest doe, aka "FussyPaws". Roughly 5 days after settling in FP made a lunge at my hand with no warning, smacking it with her bunny talons and doing a really excellent job of activating my jerk reflex. I think she enjoyed it and passed the word along because the next day the smallest doe, who had an abscess under her foreleg (which, amazingly enough, is healing up nicely after a good squeeze), decided to give it a try as well. She also found it satisfactory and the two of them now take every opportunity to whack my hand or fingers with their fore-paws!
Now when it comes to injuries I'm a serious chicken and have no delusions of grandeur; I therefore very quickly decided that a pair of leather gloves was in order when dealing with these two. This turned out to be a wise course of chicken out. Three days after FP started the talon-strike-trick I managed to keep my reflex mostly under control and kept my hand in the cage through three strikes. Turns out she has a harsh "three strikes, you're out!" policy as she quickly came in for a fourth eviction notice, but this time led with the teeth and landed an amazingly fast, well aimed, 'Chomp!' on my finger. Needless to say that had the desired effect and my hand was speedily removed from her cage. Thankfully the leather gloves saved my skin!
For now I've decided to put up with the offensive behavior and simply be wary of the mean buns! Fortunately the other doe, Nelly, as in 'nervous', is not aggressive and the buck, Burger-Bun, who was named by my six year old, seems to be almost happy at the idea of human contact. Two out of four I can enjoy seems acceptable for a first go at rabbiting but if anyone has tips on taming nasty does :all-ears: !!
Edit - just noticed several posts about mean does, reading them now!
The day I arrived at the rabbitry I found all the NZWs to be docile and friendly, eager to come over and say hello. I was pretty happy about this as my first up close view of rabbit teeth instantly convinced me I wanted nothing to do with them on an unfriendly basis. After finishing my very amateurish impression of some one examining rabbits I selected three does and loaded them and the buck (selected by the owner) into the transport cages and headed home.
The next couple days showed some nervousness in the does but that seemed to settle out quickly and was followed by more friendly, inquisitive behavior. It turns out that was all a cunning bunny lie, designed to lure me into a false sense of security by the ring-leader, the biggest doe, aka "FussyPaws". Roughly 5 days after settling in FP made a lunge at my hand with no warning, smacking it with her bunny talons and doing a really excellent job of activating my jerk reflex. I think she enjoyed it and passed the word along because the next day the smallest doe, who had an abscess under her foreleg (which, amazingly enough, is healing up nicely after a good squeeze), decided to give it a try as well. She also found it satisfactory and the two of them now take every opportunity to whack my hand or fingers with their fore-paws!
Now when it comes to injuries I'm a serious chicken and have no delusions of grandeur; I therefore very quickly decided that a pair of leather gloves was in order when dealing with these two. This turned out to be a wise course of chicken out. Three days after FP started the talon-strike-trick I managed to keep my reflex mostly under control and kept my hand in the cage through three strikes. Turns out she has a harsh "three strikes, you're out!" policy as she quickly came in for a fourth eviction notice, but this time led with the teeth and landed an amazingly fast, well aimed, 'Chomp!' on my finger. Needless to say that had the desired effect and my hand was speedily removed from her cage. Thankfully the leather gloves saved my skin!
For now I've decided to put up with the offensive behavior and simply be wary of the mean buns! Fortunately the other doe, Nelly, as in 'nervous', is not aggressive and the buck, Burger-Bun, who was named by my six year old, seems to be almost happy at the idea of human contact. Two out of four I can enjoy seems acceptable for a first go at rabbiting but if anyone has tips on taming nasty does :all-ears: !!
Edit - just noticed several posts about mean does, reading them now!