Here are a few photos of the bunnies taken yesterday. Despite being a little chilly, they still insisted on going outside... They assume that because it's warm inside (central heating) and it's sunny outside (winter sun) then it must be warm outside.
Dijon has just paid some very unhealthy attention to a piece of tinsel this evening - not that we've put up decorations yet, merely searched out some pieces for two nativity costumes. He was reaching up for it as though it were the tastiest treat, and snuffling the floor for any dropped pieces.
We will have to keep our decorations VERY well fenced off this year!
How did it come about that we started to keep house rabbits? Well, it all began fifteen years ago to the day...
It was a cold, damp, drizzly Sunday afternoon, when we spotted the most beautiful looking lop-eared bunny. I’d promised my wife I would buy her rabbit, and that day was just the right day to do it. So, one rabbit, a hutch, and all the required rabbit paraphernalia were purchased – coming to a grand total of £18.81 (an amount neither of us has ever forgotten.)
During the drive home, names were discussed, and we came up with ‘Lupin’, and the name stuck.
My understanding at the time was that rabbits lived outdoors in a hutch, but it was such a cold afternoon, and the rabbit had been living inside an enclosure in a garden centre, that it struck me quite heartless to put the poor creature outside. So, I suggested that we keep he indoors until the weather was less inclement.
She never did go outside to live.
The first night she hutch resided on the landing outside our bedroom.
The second night it was in the kitchen.
Thereafter it was in the living room.
It was a bit of a secret, and we didn’t let many people know that we were mad enough to keep a rabbit as an in door pet. Thankfully, times have changed and as a society were are a little more enlightened.
What struck me about keeping a rabbit was just how sociable they were. Whatever we did, Lupin wanted to be involved. When I was ironing, she jumped on top of her hutch to be as close as possible to the ironing bored, and she sat there, calmly watching the iron move back and forth. When we played the piano, she jumped from the roof of her hutch on the piano keyboard.
She was an adorable rabbit, who unfortunately was only with us for eight months before she succumbed to pneumonia. But the happiness she brought, and the lessons she taught us about keeping a house rabbit, have never left us.
For some snippets of Lupin in action, view the Run Rabbit Run in the Videos section.
There are plenty of large boxes for the bunnies to play in dotted around the the living room. they are quite happy to hop inside to rip them up, burrow, and scrabble, though we have to listen carefully to ensure they haven't broken through to the carpet.
It came as quite a surprise today when rearranging the boxes and checking them over to see if they needed replacing, to discover that one of the bunnies had managed to steal a few of our CDs from their shelf and drag them into a box. It was very much like a nest of CDs.
And their taste in music...? Surprisingly diverse: The Smiths, Eddie Cochran, and Alisha's Attic were amongst the discs we rescued.
Despite the abundance of popcorn, it's clear that the bunnies are not enamoured by Doctor Who.
We were watching the 50th anniversary episode last night, the whole family sitting around the television, but Mabel & Dijon stayed well away from us all, not at all tempted to come over and try to steal any of our snacks.
Yet, as soon as it was over, and the children had gone to bed, over they hopped as they usually do of an evening, Dijon demanding a stroke, Mabel just investigating.
Too many pet rabbits are kept in inadequate conditions -- cages that are too small, left out in unsheltered housing, fed a poor diet.
The RWAF has a campaign, A Hutch is Not Enough, that aims to educate owners and potential owners of how to properly provide and care for their rabbits. Here is the video that accompanies a song written especially for the campaign:
Don't know what just gave the bunnies the heebie-geebies, but they've just rocketed around the living room in panic, darting all over the place, knocking their boxes left, right and centre, and upsetting their water bowl.
When I tried to sooth Mabel, she was so tense she was solid.
We did check for foxes and cats outside, but the garden was empty. We've closed the curtains on the patio doors, and that seems to have calmed them a little. They're currently licking the dining table's legs...
Yes, yet again, the bunnies are in disgrace. Well, one bunny... Mabel. We were only out of the room for thirty seconds, but that was all it took for her to make another
sizable hole in the carpet. This time was different on two counts.
First it wasn't a hole at the side next to the skirting; no, this was a
nice big hole right in front of the piano. There's no disguising it. The
best we have been able to do is cover the affected region with a square
of Vet Bed which neither of the terrible two like. Second,
Mabel ate the pile. Not content with ripping it out, she had to make a
meal of it. When we returned to the living room, there she was standing
in front of the damage, munching happily to herself. Needless to say,
she was immediately sent straight back to the cage, where she remained
in disgrace (but only until lunch time.) We are still waiting for an apology.