I wrote an ad on Blocket, the swedish answer to craigslist I guess. Figured if anyone wanted pets they could just as well buy mine.
http://www.blocket.se/helsingborg/Medel ... a=23_3&w=1
But with rabbits being so common as kids pets then ending up being forgotten in a corner of the house somewhere while the owners hope it will die on its own soon.. I want to be a bit careful on who to sell too. I already said that children will not be able to buy them unless their parents are there and seem genuinly interested, and that I will take back any rabbit - no returned funds - if they for any reason don't want it.
I also posted some info on rabbits, how they live in th wild, that these are raised in a colony, they need space to move and that they can live forten years (so people who still think it's a nice pet that die conveniently after a year or two, will think further). Even giving some advice on how to provide a permanent playground for them..
Yes, I'm as surprised as anyone that I actually got answers on that ad..
Anyhow.. I did get an answer on mail, and sent my phone number. What do I ask the buyer? I want to know that they have thought their purchase through and are prepared to give the rabbit more space than minimum legal cage space... but I don't want to scare them off either..
What do I say if I find that I just don't want my rabbits to end up in that home, and literally fear it's a fate worse than death?
____
I had some people buying something else here yesterday and they sort of scared me.. the woman told her kids "Oh, you want a rabbit each?" then asked me what size the rabbits would be, and when I told her she said to her kids "No, those will be too large to cuddle with, you can't have them. We'll find you dwarf rabbits." Which is fine, I guess.. a way to avoid getting a pet that seems to large for the space they could provide. Fair enough, although I'd say large rabbits are often more cuddly. But then upon noticing my 3 week old kits, "oh, but they are small! Can they leave mommy yet? At what age can they leave the mommy?" - "No.. they're just three weeks they need to be eight, and they'll be just as large as the others who are 8 weeks now" -- "But maybe they'll stay small longer?".... at that point I must admit I was happy that A. they were too young and B. my others were too large and C. they were too expencive (at half the price of a pet store rabbit)
I mean.. so you get 2 more weeks of small rabbits, what will you do with it the other 5-9 years when it's large?
They also wanted one of each (male + female) but I doubt they'd neuter them.
Anyhow. It were nice people, I've chatted a bit with them online prior to the buisness and they seemed sensible for most parts.. but this reasoning came as a bit of a chock to me. Well well.. Maybe they would have taken good care of the rabbits. I don't know, they had animal experience and showed some good sense when they told the kids how to act in the colony (sit still and wait for the bunnies rather than chasing them.) I might be overreacting, but it just struck me as they were not aware of what kind of pet a rabbit is or how long they'd live. Or how fast they grow
http://www.blocket.se/helsingborg/Medel ... a=23_3&w=1
But with rabbits being so common as kids pets then ending up being forgotten in a corner of the house somewhere while the owners hope it will die on its own soon.. I want to be a bit careful on who to sell too. I already said that children will not be able to buy them unless their parents are there and seem genuinly interested, and that I will take back any rabbit - no returned funds - if they for any reason don't want it.
I also posted some info on rabbits, how they live in th wild, that these are raised in a colony, they need space to move and that they can live forten years (so people who still think it's a nice pet that die conveniently after a year or two, will think further). Even giving some advice on how to provide a permanent playground for them..
Yes, I'm as surprised as anyone that I actually got answers on that ad..
Anyhow.. I did get an answer on mail, and sent my phone number. What do I ask the buyer? I want to know that they have thought their purchase through and are prepared to give the rabbit more space than minimum legal cage space... but I don't want to scare them off either..
What do I say if I find that I just don't want my rabbits to end up in that home, and literally fear it's a fate worse than death?
____
I had some people buying something else here yesterday and they sort of scared me.. the woman told her kids "Oh, you want a rabbit each?" then asked me what size the rabbits would be, and when I told her she said to her kids "No, those will be too large to cuddle with, you can't have them. We'll find you dwarf rabbits." Which is fine, I guess.. a way to avoid getting a pet that seems to large for the space they could provide. Fair enough, although I'd say large rabbits are often more cuddly. But then upon noticing my 3 week old kits, "oh, but they are small! Can they leave mommy yet? At what age can they leave the mommy?" - "No.. they're just three weeks they need to be eight, and they'll be just as large as the others who are 8 weeks now" -- "But maybe they'll stay small longer?".... at that point I must admit I was happy that A. they were too young and B. my others were too large and C. they were too expencive (at half the price of a pet store rabbit)
I mean.. so you get 2 more weeks of small rabbits, what will you do with it the other 5-9 years when it's large?
They also wanted one of each (male + female) but I doubt they'd neuter them.
Anyhow. It were nice people, I've chatted a bit with them online prior to the buisness and they seemed sensible for most parts.. but this reasoning came as a bit of a chock to me. Well well.. Maybe they would have taken good care of the rabbits. I don't know, they had animal experience and showed some good sense when they told the kids how to act in the colony (sit still and wait for the bunnies rather than chasing them.) I might be overreacting, but it just struck me as they were not aware of what kind of pet a rabbit is or how long they'd live. Or how fast they grow