While building out your rabbitry enclosure/shed/barn, be sure to give some thought to physical security: surveillance cameras, motion lights, locks, etc. At least one breeder on this list has found it necessary to put locks on individual rabbits' cages for their security.
Although I acquired my one and only rabbit through a shelter, I learned fairly soon into the process that he had been the herd sire/buck for a back-yard (literally) meat operation within city limits (not legal) *and* that the rabbits were in full sun without shade or water on a 108-degree F (approx. 42 deg C) June day. The Animal Control and City Shelter personnel didn't have the resources to cope with 48 or so rabbits (by my count, this could have been 1 buck, 4 to 6 does, and several litters of kits/grow-outs, so a fairly small operation), so they called in the local chapter of the House Rabbit Society. Much was made of this incident--major media exposure on both TV and newspaper, probably Internet as well (although most of the Internet coverage had been archived by the time I came on the scene three months later)--and then there was another large acquisition of 52 rabbits about a week or two ago in the San Francisco Bay Area, when someone sold out of rabbits completely and a Rescuer *sigh* bought them.
When it looked (last July) as though I might be able to adopt a rescued Angora from the local HRS, I went to visit the "Angora" rabbit and was force-fed their "How to Live with a House Rabbit" DVD. They shoved it into the player not 2 feet from the ex-pen where I was sitting with the (definitely NOT Angora) rabbit. Among other points, the DVD showed ONE rabbit running through a large living room without let or hindrance while a standard heterosexual couple with one child watched adoringly. Although there was a white (!) carpet and light-colored furniture in the DVD, there were no bunny berries.... The voice-over kept talking about how the rabbit (in the singular) needed 3 to 4 hours of free time to run in the house or supervised in a yard/pen outdoors every day and that it needed to have certain kinds of housing, certain sizes of housing, preferably a room where it could have a calm atmosphere... The DVD said everything
but "each rabbit needs its own bedroom." I found it pretty yucky, personally: housing costs in the Bay Area are terrible; there was a
story in today's paper (both print and online) about how the average rent is now $2,000+/month for an apartment. People are bunk-bedding their kids, jamming their offices into their kitchens and living rooms, and sleeping in I don't know what-all just to keep a roof over their heads.
And the HRS and its allies want each rabbit practically to have its own bedroom??? and they wonder why rabbits stay at the fosters and the HRS and other rabbit rescues so very long???
They do not get the connection between their ideals (
requirements, actually) and the rabbits who live for months, sometimes years, in fosterage. But they keep pushing the "plenty of space to run free in the house" idea. :shock:
If this type of...individual...finds that you have multiple rabbits IN CAGES OH MY GOD and that they LIVE in the cages, I wouldn't give much for the security of those rabbits unless you've planned ahead of time.
Search this site for terms like "ARAs" (Animal Rights Activists), "PETA" (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals--although their "Ethics" are worth an entire discussion in and of themselves), "theft," "security," "biosecurity," and others as they come to your mind.
Although all rabbits deserve shade and plenty of water, and I learned much later that the owners of my rabbit and his fellows had been warned and worked with previously by Animal Control, I am still haunted by the thought that a family of 14 living in one house in a large California city (NOT in the Bay Area) lost their probable source of protein last June.... :|