While I'm truly honored that Wally is so loved, it's unwise to buy an Angora without sufficient knowledge or preparation. Wally is my third rabbit, and even after years of learning about rabbit behavior, care, and safety, Angoras' special grooming needs have required a great deal of patience, time, and dedication. Rabbits are neither simple nor easy pets and can live for 10+ years. Behaviors that can be typical for rabbits (meaning that they are simply being rabbits!) include chewing on fabric, wood, and furniture, peeing on beds and couches, biting, scratching, thumping, hiding in small spaces, being fearful and mistrustful of people, struggling for freedom when being picked up, and skillfully escaping enclosures. You must be ready to appropriately respond to these behaviors and willing to understand what your rabbit is attempting to communicate and then listen to your rabbit. I really believe that there are no "bad" rabbits (whether they destroy your sofa or bite you with seemingly no apparent reason) - there are only people who have unrealistic expectations of the greatly misunderstood rabbit. Happy rabbits require a significant amount of research and preparation. Angoras require even more. Please, don't get a rabbit - and especially not an Angora - if you cannot be certain that you can provide the rabbit with an environment and level of care that is critical to the bunny's wellbeing. This includes spaying/neutering, paying for vet bills, never confining them solely to small cages, litter box training, understanding that many rabbits do not tolerate being picked up or handled by children, buying fresh greens several times per week, providing unlimited hay, and being observant of their eating and elimination patterns, as they are masters at hiding health problems because they are prey animals. Rabbit.org is an informative website. If you cannot follow all guidelines on this website, you may not be ready for a rabbit, which suggests that an Angora would be a very difficult first rabbit. Thank you for reading!

wally_and_mollyさん(@wally_and_molly)が投稿した動画 -

ウォーリーのインスタグラム(wally_and_molly) - 3月1日 22時13分


While I'm truly honored that Wally is so loved, it's unwise to buy an Angora without sufficient knowledge or preparation. Wally is my third rabbit, and even after years of learning about rabbit behavior, care, and safety, Angoras' special grooming needs have required a great deal of patience, time, and dedication. Rabbits are neither simple nor easy pets and can live for 10+ years. Behaviors that can be typical for rabbits (meaning that they are simply being rabbits!) include chewing on fabric, wood, and furniture, peeing on beds and couches, biting, scratching, thumping, hiding in small spaces, being fearful and mistrustful of people, struggling for freedom when being picked up, and skillfully escaping enclosures. You must be ready to appropriately respond to these behaviors and willing to understand what your rabbit is attempting to communicate and then listen to your rabbit. I really believe that there are no "bad" rabbits (whether they destroy your sofa or bite you with seemingly no apparent reason) - there are only people who have unrealistic expectations of the greatly misunderstood rabbit. Happy rabbits require a significant amount of research and preparation. Angoras require even more. Please, don't get a rabbit - and especially not an Angora - if you cannot be certain that you can provide the rabbit with an environment and level of care that is critical to the bunny's wellbeing. This includes spaying/neutering, paying for vet bills, never confining them solely to small cages, litter box training, understanding that many rabbits do not tolerate being picked up or handled by children, buying fresh greens several times per week, providing unlimited hay, and being observant of their eating and elimination patterns, as they are masters at hiding health problems because they are prey animals. Rabbit.org is an informative website. If you cannot follow all guidelines on this website, you may not be ready for a rabbit, which suggests that an Angora would be a very difficult first rabbit. Thank you for reading!


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