Friday, April 24, 2009

It's Bunny Season!



Bunny season has arrived. I have received five baby bunnies in the last three days. Last year I was bombarded with baby bunnies and I hope this year the rabbits are a little bit less prolific.

Please remember that not all bunnies need rescuing. If they are about 4 inches long (about fist-sized), ears standing up, eyes open, hopping around, they most likely don't need rescuing. Bunnies are out on their own at a very early age. It is normal for them to stay still and motionless when they are frightened so often times if you approach one it will stay in place. Many times people think this means they need to intervene and "rescue" the bunny.

Also, mother rabbits are not like mother cats or dogs. They do not stay in the nest with their young for very long. They visit the nest to feed their babies once or twice a day. So if you find a nest of bunnies but you don't see the mother, it does not mean that they have been abandoned. The absolute best thing you can do is to leave the nest alone and watch for the mother to return to feed her babies. If that is not possible, you can check the nest the next day to see if the young appear to have been fed.

The bunnies pictured above were from one nest. There were 10 of them. The mother had been killed. These little ones didn't have their eyes open yet so they were less than 10 days old. In this case human intervention was required if these little ones were to survive. Please remember that the best thing for these babies is that they be raised by their mother. It is impossible to duplicate what wild mothers do for their young and they don't always survive under our care. No matter how hard we try.