Tuesday, 7 January 2014

Post 100: Photo time

Here are the promised photos of Mabel & Dijon from the past few weeks. Remember, click to see a larger version of your chosen picture.

Mabel in her scrabble box

Nibble from the treat trough

You ain't seen me, right!

Dozy Dijon

Talk to the tail

Sleepy heads

Snack time

A Belated Hoppy New Year

Yes, we've been remiss in not updating the blog for a while. Mabel and Dijon were very settled over the Christmas period, and were not at all perturbed by the presence of the tree, and the (minor) rearrangements to their living area.

Now the tree is down and everything is back to normal, so no doubt we will have a new round of mischief to contend with, especially with the days growing longer. More daylight = more naughtiness.

As was of apology for being so reticent over the past couple of weeks we'll be posting some photos of the bunnies very soon....

Saturday, 28 December 2013

Rabbiting on: Study and debate on talking to bunnies

Don't know how we managed to miss this article from BBC News, but it's well worth a read.
To quote from the report:
  • Rabbits have various ways of making people aware of how they feel
  • When stroked along the jaw line they grind their teeth, a sign that they are contented
  • A rabbit that runs towards its owner when it sees them is another indicator of a pet that associates its owner with positive interactions
  • Honking and binking (sic) means they are excited
  • But one that lunges at its owner with ears back and grunting is not happy bunny 
Another way bunnies have of expressing themselves is the tail shake. Dijon is an avid tail-shaker, especially when he is being ushered back into the living room from the hall. An exaggerated shake of the tail is what we receive, a sure sign that we are seriously out of favour!

It will be interesting to see where the research leads and what conclusions it draws.

Friday, 27 December 2013

Christmas Present

OK, so Christmas was two days ago, so we're a little late in posting anything... Mabel and Dijon had a lovely time; Mabel had a few tasty pieces of carpet pile and Dijon ate a strip of a metal case from a mince pie. For Christmas they received some dried Dandelion leaves that they can't get enough of.

We also received a couple of lovely bunny-related gifts all the way from Switzerland. First, there was a handmade tree decoration in the shape of a rabbit. It's about 5 inches tall, and looks lovely when surrounded by the other tree decorations:

There were two larger cream-coloured versions of this, that are about 10 inches tall:

We're not sure where to put them, so for now they are resting majestically on the back of an armchair. They wouldn't be safe on the floor - Mabel and Dijon would take too much of in interest in them...

Tuesday, 17 December 2013

Pipecleaner Bunny

Just toying with a couple of pipecleaners in an attempt to fashion a bunny, and here's what was was produced (not too dissimilar from Dijon...)




Of course, if new pipecleaners had been used the bunny would have look a lot neater, but old is all we had lying around.

Sunday, 15 December 2013

Chinny chin chin

Mabel's been hard at work this morning, shredding a box from the inside out...
Shredding, from the inside out

Chin up!

Thursday, 5 December 2013

A Few Photos

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.

Bunny Love -- Allogrooming

Dijon the Fluff Ball

Powder Puff Tail

Noses

Foraging in Flower Pots

Nibbles in a Tough

Tuesday, 3 December 2013

Tinsel town

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!

Saturday, 30 November 2013

Plastered

Whilst having a tidy up of the computer earlier today, I stumbled upon this scan of picture of Mabel and Dijon as created in February this year.

Quite an imaginative use of plasters for the ears, I think, and drawn in a way that only a 4 year old can achieve.

Friday, 29 November 2013

Lupin: How it all Began

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.