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Training bunnies for Pet Homes

8/7/2014

 
One of the things I do with my bunnies is I handle them to help them transition well to their new homes.  :)  Most of my bunnies go into pet homes, a few into breeder or show homes, the occasional ones go into therapy or sport homes.  It's all good.  Everyone wants bunnies they can handle.

Step One:
Handling babies in the box.   I take them out twice a day and give them a basic check.  Bellies full, hair growing, looking healthy.  Day three I give them a good going over as I often find I can tell which one (if any) that I want to keep for myself.
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Step Two:
Starting around day nine I start handling them more.  Switching them from hand to hand, holding them in various position, light pets, etc.  I play with feet a bit, but not over much.  Just enough they know I'm there are are ALERT to me handling them.   At this stage I watch for babies that startle easily and give them MORE handling, making note that I won't be holding them back and will aim for teen/adult homes for those kits.  At this stage I watch how their eyes are doing as well, start checking teeth etc.
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Week three and four I start being even more deliberate in my handling.   My aim is to produce a bunny that learns the word STOP and will lie still for me when held on it's back (this helps new owner do things like nail trims).   So I will get bunny used to being flipped.  Will he stay there?  Does she need to be encouraged?   
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Encouragement often takes the form of EASY, STOP and the forever popular head stroke.   Giving a firmly gentle stroke down the forehead towards the ears settles most rabbits quite quickly.
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I will get bunny used to getting teeth checked.  And it's head being held.
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I will play with their feet to get them used to feet being touched for nail trims (It's one of my personal pet peeves when I buy a rabbit and trimming nail becomes this major adventure down a trail I don't want to be on).
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I always finish a session with a GOOD bunny and solid pet down it's back a few times.  This settles bunny nicely and this would also be the time when I offer a treat of a small piece of apple, a dandelion leaf etc.  
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New Composter Built

7/10/2014

 
Having rabbits means having rabbit waste to dispose of.   Ergo the need for a composter (or some folks just do a poop pile).  My preference is to have things contained (also my hubby's preference).
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I had thought about making a screen front as i did last time, as well as making two stand alone composters, but the middle skid is an especially heavy skid that I thought, why not see if I can't make it as a complete unit.  Low and behold I could!   It's also painted and I'm not sure if that means anything.  But it's good and heavy and was at the "for free" pile at the Rona, so I figure it can't be worth too much if anything (or they'd send it back for the dollars right)?   So anywho.. I got it in there and it's holding nicely.
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As you can see I'm using ZIPTIEs to hold it all together.  I needed to get the black ones as they are meant for outdoor use.  The fellow at RONA said it's important to make that distinction.   Most of the time I put one up top and one on the bottom, but in a couple of places I put one in the middle as well.  Particularly around the middle support.   I usually had to join three together but twice I could use just two to connect the skids, and once I had to use four.    Hubby came by and said "good job hun".  Made me feel good to hear those words.  :)
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I put it to work immediately.  I put in all the stuff I'd be collecting for the past week or so.  It's well mixed now.  It's also now got some leaves in it that collected over the winter.  I placed it right next to the shed.
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I like how the composter is well away from the rabbits this time.  hopefully that will keep the fly population down a bit.  I plan to put up some lemonade jars for the flies as well.  That should help get rid of a few more of them.  :)

S'mores & Honey-Buns

7/9/2014

 
I am from K___________ and my girls and I purchased a pair of Holland Lops from you in May. For some reason I don't have your direct email address saved in my phone but I wanted to give you an update. We love love love our bunnies! They have been traveling with us back and forth to the trailer in G_________________ with ease. The girls handle them and play with them daily so have turned into well mannered little fellows. Although I haven't mastered clipping their nails, I am mastering this bunny thing pretty good I think. 
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at the trailer
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dressup time
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At home
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Where have all the pet stores gone?

5/13/2014

 
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Where Have All The Pet Stores Gone?
by Jacquelyn Fogel

We have been duped. Dog breeders have been used by the Animal Activists in their war on domestic pets. About 25 years ago a small core of Animal Activists who are now in control of all the major national animal rights organizations forged a plan, and we unwittingly helped them out. They started a campaign to close down all pet stores that had live animals in them, knowing full well that the demand for the puppies in these facilities would remain high. Dog breeders helped them. We railed against the nasty pet stores and their supplies of unworthy dogs. We offered up our own well-bred puppies as alternatives, even though we could never meet the demand the public has for puppies. We thought we were taking the high road, and embraced the new animal rights-leaning shelters that wanted to shut down the pet stores. We even put statements into our “codes of ethics” that said we would never allow our puppies to be sold in a pet store. We felt holy.

Never mind that these stores were usually independently owned by small, local business owners who fed their families on the profits from these stores. Never mind that most of the puppies were purchased locally from breeders in our surrounding communities. Never mind that these stores were all regulated locally and federally and at least in theory, inspected by USDA and local health departments. Never mind that these were all legal, profit-making, tax-paying businesses that bought supplies from local vendors and sold to local residents. Never mind that these business owners supported local service organizations and donated to local churches and charities. Never mind that the public still wanted to buy puppies and we hobby breeders were all but invisible to them as we guarded our precious bloodlines from falling into unscrupulous hands. We agreed with the animal activists that these puppies were unhealthy, and the owners of these stores should be punished and put out of business

So where does the public go to buy their puppies now? Pet ownership is at an all-time high, and many of us hobby breeders still have trouble selling our pure bred puppies for what they are actually worth. I’ll tell you where the public is getting their pets from. They are now going to the retail shelters and rescues to find their pets. The small, local breeders that supplied local pet stores are being replaced by commercial kennels far away and invisible. The poorly operated puppy farms are still breeding dogs, they have merely gone further underground. The transportation of puppies from huge kennels and shelters in the south and from places outside this country has ballooned into a multi-million dollar mega-business. Now here’s the real kicker. Most of these retailers of puppies now claim non-profit status. They don’t pay taxes to support their communities any more. They slap the title “rescue” onto what they are doing, and suddenly they are self-righteous saviors of poor mistreated animals rather than brokers and transporters of poorly manufactured products specifically bred to produce a profit. And the public who is “rescuing” these dogs feels holy.
Follow the money. If you ever need to know why something is happening the way it is, and your common sense is telling you the logical signs just don’t add up, follow the money. By shifting the sales of pets from regulated, independent, tax-paying businesses to largely clandestine, non-profit suppliers the animal activists have brilliantly co-opted the very enemy we thought we were fighting against. Realistically all shelters should have been working to put themselves out of business – not the pet stores. They should have done such good work educating the public how to be responsible dog owners that over time there would no longer be a critical need for their services. Obviously that didn’t happen. Here in Wisconsin we recently built a $6.5 million facility that has to have semi-loads of dogs shipped in regularly to keep it stocked. And they can turn-around (sell the entire inventory)their product in about 48 hours. That certainly makes them enough cash to keep the doors open and the lights on. And they don’t pay taxes.

How about this overwhelming push to spay and neuter all dogs? Wow! What a money maker that has become! Now a local individual or their neighbors and friends cannot morally create their own pets because it is unethical to keep their dogs intact. They have to go back to the retail shelter stores to purchase another one. The animal activists have even co-opted the veterinary community into believing that all pets should be spayed and neutered, when, in fact, there is no clinical evidence to support that this is best for every animal. Just now some studies are coming out that say, in fact, the opposite is true. I don’t know why the veterinary community has allowed themselves to be so coopted, unless I follow the money. As my own vet points out, she would be out of business tomorrow if all of the mixed breeds were as healthy as people claim they are. Common sense should be telling us the same thing. If heterogeneity was the answer to perfect health, then humans would be the healthiest species on the face of the planet. And we are not. Genetics work pretty much the same across species.

Does anyone think outside the propaganda anymore? I ask people regularly when they last saw a stray dog in their neighborhood. In northern states it is rare. If a dog is found loose, more often than not, it is a runaway not a stray. Most of the dogs in shelters are surrenders, not strays. And who is surrendering those dogs? Could it be the same population of people who wanted to rescue the ill-tempered, unhealthy puppies they saw in shelters? Everyone wants to be a savior – until it gets expensive, dangerous or just too hard. Then they return the untrained, older dog that now has even more serious issues to a shelter that re-sells it to someone else. When I get a puppy back as an older dog, I usually place the dog in a new home for nothing. And I have to spend time and advertising money screening the new potential owners. The revolving door of sell, surrender, re-sell can become quite profitable if a shelter gets the same amount of money each time they sell the same dog.
This is how far out-of-whack things have gotten in this country. Some time ago I was nominated by a member in one of my national breed clubs to receive a breeder of the year award. The person who actually won the award is a fine breeder in the UK and she does a great job with her dogs. But the primary reason I was eliminated as a contender for the breeder of the year award was because I do not support “rescue,” and had actually written articles about what mixed-breed rescue has become in this country. Silly me. I thought the award was about being a breeder. My dogs don’t go into rescue programs because I take them back or rehome them if at any point in their lives they cannot be kept by their owners. I have started a non-profit, Keep Your Pets, Inc, dedicated to keeping families in crisis together with their pets, but that is not good enough. Apparently it is now not even politically correct for breeders to disparage the concept of rescue as it has evolved in this country. I don’t rescue dogs; I breed and sell them, and sometimes rehome them. And there is nothing wrong with that model.

I am a business owner in a Capitalist, free-market economy. My primary business is boarding and grooming pets, but I also sell well-bred puppies. And I spend a lot of money to produce and market those puppies. I don’t get any tax breaks. I don’t get free dog food or free veterinary care. I don’t ask for my supplies to be donated, I purchase them from local vendors. It’s a good model, and it works for all products, not just automobiles and refrigerators. We get so caught up in the “give a puppy a good home” sob stories that we forget that our dogs are a product, too. I adore my dogs. My children often said I loved the dogs more than I loved them (totally untrue). But it does take a lot of time, wisdom and money to produce healthy, well-socialized purebred puppies. We should not feel guilty about wanting to be compensated for the time it takes us to produce a superior product. By refusing to use the language of commerce to talk about pets, we have somehow placed them in a different logical spot in our brain.

The current suppliers and sellers of puppies are not fooled. They are very clear about the economics of producing, transporting and selling millions of poorly bred and cheaply produced dogs to unwitting customers for a lot of money. They use the language of adoption and rescue, but they follow the economics of a free enterprise, Capitalist system. They may call themselves “non-profit”, but they are making millions of dollars from the distribution and sales of these puppies. Only we hobby breeders have been foolish enough to let our emotional ties to our dogs get in the way of understanding this economic model.

It’s all about supply and demand – and ultimately the demise of domestic pet ownership. Now that shelters and rescues are the last retail places to produce and sell pets, how easy will it be for them to suddenly “expose” the source of all their dogs as nasty puppy farms. Is it too far a stretch to then imagine that they will try to manipulate the emotions they have already sensitized to simply quit demanding these miserable creatures? How better to put someone out of business than to quit demanding their product? Right now, in the animal activist world, it is immoral to own a well-bred purebred, or an unspayed or unneutered dog. If the next step is to say it is immoral to own a dog produced by a puppy farm, they are dangerously close to making all pet ownership immoral. If you don’t think this is the real agenda, then you just are not paying attention.

Personally, I don’t think people will allow themselves to be so completely manipulated by these animal activist evangelists. The general public still loves to own a dog even if they now prefer to call it an adoption. But 15 years ago I would not have foreseen a population that preferred to “rescue” a dog rather than buy one from a good breeder if they could afford it. I also did not see the demise of the local for-profit retail pet stores being replaced by non-profit retail shelters. That change happened much faster than I thought it could. Where have all the retail pet stores gone? We helped to put them out of business, never stopping to realize that we were the next targets in a well-planned campaign to end all pet ownership. It’s time for dog breeders to become activists in support of all people who want to legally breed and work with animals. The activists are picking us off one group at a time. Yesterday the pet stores and circuses, today the Carriage Horses and pig farms, tomorrow the hobby breeders, and the day after that, all breeders of all animals. It’s time to choose sides and get active. There is more to aspire to than the next purple ribbon – a way of life is at stake.

Appeared in Showsight Magazine, March 2014, Volume 22, #8
 

Litter training a rabbit

5/13/2014

 

Guide to Bunny Poop

4/13/2014

 
Watching fecal output on animals tends to be something owners keep a watch on.  BUT if you don't know what's normal, how do you know what is different?

I never thought of doing a post like this, but had my way pointed to a post someone else had done up and thought hey... neat idea.  BUT I haven't done up a post NOR taken pictures of rabbit or guinea pig poop so I'll just like you to this post for now until I decide to do up a post of my own.  :)

Cheers.

Guide to Rabbit Poop. 
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click image to go to source

ASPCA ideas on how much pets cost

3/29/2014

 
PET CARE COSTS
How much is that doggie (or kitty, rabbit, rat, goldfish or guinea pig…) in the shelter window? In addition to the initial cost of adoption, there’s a whole litany of expenses that the average pet owner will incur within a year. To make it easier for you to plan for your new arrival, we’ve prepared a financial breakdown of the annual costs of caring for a variety of species.   To see the chart in full click here.

I found their price guidelines rather a lot off.   $730 to care for one rabbit over the course of one year and that's just regular care.  AND if one considers what all the first year costs might be with neutering and other such things at over $1000.   It was like HUH?   how do you figure that.

For ONE rabbit, even using the expensive litter....$730 for one year????  NOT....

At the most for litter it would be $240 ($20 bag of carefresh per month) for litter (most people go cheaper and do pine or aspen which would significantly bring that amount down.   If one wished to you might be able to get pet insurance, you might wish to buy toys but you certainly don't have to, litter boxes for rabbits don't tend to cost $25.  
Anyways, I found it interesting, you might too. .

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10 ten tips for taming piggies

3/13/2014

 
)
These tips might be helpful to folks who own piggies.  :)
I find the biggest thing with piggies is 
1. understanding who they are
2. giving them time to chill
3. being confident in how you handle them.

Trimming a Guinea Pig Nails

3/13/2014

 
)
Good tips in this video.
If you don't have styptic powder you can use flour as well.  This is only in case you accidentally hit the quick.
If you trim every 4 weeks you really don't have to cut off very much.
Putting in a rough surface helps with keeping their nails short as well.  With my pigs I give them a brick they need to climb onto in order to get to their food bowl.

Nail Trims

3/13/2014

 
Trimming nails this way personally would drive me crazy, but it's a method that might work for some in the handling of their rabbits.   Nails DO need to be trimmed every four weeks.
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    I have been breeding rabbits for a quite a few years.  I thoroughly enjoy them as animals and think they make great pets.  I also like to take some of them to rabbit shows to see how they measure up to the standards.

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    You can find me on Facebook and instagram. 
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    For the BEST rabbit forum I've ever found.  Go to Rabbittalk.com.  Good for the pet rabbit owner as well as the breeder for meat or show. 
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