Puppy Pen Accident
Ebony had an awful accident three weeks ago. She was trapped in the puppy pen, which we used to rabbit-proof the room overnight. She’d pushed her head through the 1.5-inch gap and was stuck with the bars either side of her neck. Fortunately, we found her in time, but she was traumatised, badly hurt, her eyes were red and weepy, and she fractured two front toes; she struggled to chew and swallow any food for a fortnight following the accident.
We’d heard warnings about ‘X-pens’/puppy pens, and read advice to add mesh to stop rabbits becoming trapped between the bars, but assumed it only happened to smaller rabbits, with cheaper/flimsy pens, or rabbits unfamiliar with a pen.
PLEASE NOTE:
- Ebony is a 2kg adult rabbit, with a broad head;
- The puppy pen bars are strong – significant force was required to prise them apart to release Ebony’s head;
- We’ve used puppy pens for the 5 years Ebony’s lived here (and long before that), yet she has rarely even poked her nose through.
The fact that it’s happened to Ebony shows it can happen to any rabbit. Please don’t make our mistake of assuming it won’t happen – if you use puppy pens, add a mesh or other covering to protect your rabbits.
We don’t think Ebony had been trapped for long when we discovered her, as there was only a small amount of fur on the carpet from her struggle – possibly she heard us downstairs and was excited about breakfast. Initially we weren’t sure she’d survive. We were all traumatised, but a thorough examination by our vet found no damage to her neck, head, or teeth, and she responded to pain relief. Ebony avoids being picked up, so we battled with administering meloxicam and syringe feeding. For three days, she was unable to eat even chopped, mashed, soaked, or pureed food.
We have replaced our puppy pens with plastic panels, to rabbit-proof areas of the room, and covered the night-time puppy pen fence with mesh panels. Hopefully we can make others aware of this hazard.