Archive for July, 2008
We are moving!
I can’t wait!
I can’t wait to move to our new place so that I can start setting up a NIC cage for the duo.
Hubby bought these wired cubes from Carefour in KL, brought them all the way back to NL and that box has been sitting in a corner for a month!
I have in mind already what their cage will look like, and I plan to setup an area with the NIC cage inside. The 2 floors NIC cage will be sitting inside a playpen. The buns can go in and out of their cage as and when they like.
It is unfortunate that we still can’t move into a house with backyard. By then, I will definitely let them run free in the garden.
So I told my buns, have a bit of patience and wait for a little while longer buddies
1 comment July 30, 2008
How to toilet train your rabbit
My friends are so surprised when I told them that my bunnies are all toilet trained. Meaning: they know when to go and where the toilet is when they want to pee or poo. I have to capture that unbelievable expression on their face to really show you what I mean.
Rabbits are more intelligent and more sociable than what we think they are. Having them toilet trained is easy and they pick up very fast. Some takes a day or two, some takes longer. But it can be done with a little bit of patience.
Here is what you need:
1) Litter box – the normal cat litter box is fine. I prefer those that has a higher edge. Some bunnies raise their butt too high and they overshoot. It happened to my previous bun.
2) Hay – the hay that your rabbit is currently consuming
3) Bathroom mat or wire mesh – to cover the litter material to prevent the rabbits from consuming them. I have also tried wired document tray with holes before. All of them work well as long as you can separate the rabbits from the litter material.
4) Litter material – Paper based/Organic litter material is recommended. Newspaper or plenty of hay is fine too but you will need to be very diligent in cleaning the box. I avoid crystalite type of cat litter, corn cat litter, or other type of litter which are very dusty – they are not good for rabbits respiratory system.
5) Balsamic vinegar – to clean up any unwanted pee outside of the litter box to clear away the markings and odour. I find this vinegar works the best compared to white vinegar. It’s strong.
6) A bun that is already spayed/neutered. I would say this contributes 50% of the success rate!
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Let me share my litter training experience with you:
1) First, lay your litter box with the litter material, the bathroom mat/mesh, and then the hay on top.
2) Put your bun into a smaller area, and put the litter box in the same area as well.
3) Pick up any poos that are outside of the box. This action will move his/her ’smell’ into the litter box. When the bun pees outside of the litter box, wipe it away and use the balsamic vinegar to wipe on that spot. Talk to him in a gentle voice saying something like, “No no, not the right place buddy”.
4) If the bun keeps peeing in the same area, eventhough you’ve wiped the balsamic vinegar in that same spot many times, then move your litter box to cover that particular area. It is easier to accommodate him than he accommodates you. If you find that the bun is peeing in more than one area, no matter where you put the box, then you can try this:
a) Clean up the whole area by washing it thoroughly with cleaning products to wash away his ’smell’ and start again OR
b) Put another litter box OR
c) Reduce the size of the training area OR
d) Change the rabbit, this is a stubborn bun! (just kidding…
)
5) If you see him poos inside the litter box, praise him by giving him a gentle pat on his head, or give him a treat that he likes.
6) When trained successfully, you will get zero pee and 2 or 3 poos outside of the box. Do expects a few poos outside of box now and then because that’s rabbit’s way of marking his territory.
If your bun is too young to be spayed/neutered and you need him/her to be litter trained, no worries, you can still do it. But do expect more peeing outside of the box (especially for male bun), and there is a possibility that your bun’s toilet habit might change after spaying/neutering. So you might need to retrain him/her after that. In any case, they all can be litter trained.
Once you reach zero pee stage, start to expand the bun’s area. Do it step by step. If you plan to let your bun free access to a big area, make sure that you prepare another litter box to cover the area. Some buns need extra litter boxes, some don’t.
In my experience, Kenji has a whole apartment (1000 sq ft) to himself then, and he knows exactly where to go to when he needs his toilet. He can recognise the way back to his litter box.
Enjoy the litter training experience!
Add comment July 21, 2008
I want airtime too!
This is Yuki’s complain.
So far, I haven’t seen her do anything special. If she has, I was so focused on her that I forgot to take pictures. But hubby managed to snap some photos of her yesterday. He was cleaning their cage and he tripped over the Dutch house while she is digging inside. As a result, she couldn’t get out.
Hubby found her so cute that he quickly grabbed my camera and captured these few shots.
Yuki:”Hey… you…”
Yuki:”Help… anyone… Kennnnji?”
Yuki:”Help!!!”
Eventually, before hubby let her out, she managed to jump out of the box ALL BY HERSELF!
2 comments July 14, 2008
I’m a digger!
The city hall gave us a set of gift (promotion brochures), all packed into this little Dutch house looking box.
I took away all the brochures, and cut a hole in front of the house. It became Kenji’s favourite digging spot.
Almost every morning I was awaken by his digging sound. This morning I managed to capture him in action.
Kenji:” I dig, I dig, I dig dig dig!”
Kenji:”What are you looking at? Haven’t you seen me dig before?”
Add comment July 8, 2008
Resting side by side…
Kenji:”See, mama is taking pictures of us again…”
Yuki:”Yeah… but I’m not going to move to show off my butt.”
Kenji:”Well… just lay still. I’ve been through this thousand of times. She will go off…”
1 comment July 3, 2008
German police baffled by rabbit deaths
DORTMUND, Germany, June 11 (UPI) — Officials in several communities in Germany admit they’re baffled by the grisly decapitations of more than 40 pet rabbits.
Instances of rabbits being beheaded then drained of their blood have been reported in Dortmund and surrounding areas on a weekly basis, Spiegel Online reported Wednesday. Sometimes the carcasses are left and sometimes the pet vanishes.
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This is so horrible. It sent shivers down my back. How can some human be so cruel?
Add comment July 1, 2008





