Just a note that cats carry all sorts of nasty diseases, and even if they don’t manage to kill their prey immediately they usually die of infection shortly after.
if it’s a bunny that is larger than a tennis ball, and its ears are upright, it’s old enough to be on its own
Best option is to release it back where she found it and keep an eye on it if she’s worried about the cat again.
Also if she has some greens like arugula, clover, basil, cilantro, or any lettuce except iceberg available those will sit better in the bunny’s tummy than carrots which have too much sugar.
I’m new to rehabbing this season, but when they showed us the baby rabbit room on our tour, they said the door is only opened twice and day and you’re not supposed to talk in there because babies rabbits are very susceptible to dying from stress.
This rabbit looks bigger than most of the ones in there, but if they want it to have the best chances of living and not getting too tame and unable to survive in the wild, it should go to a rehab ASAP.
I deleted my reply after I saw that comment, but since you replied, I undeleted it.
Even adult animals shouldn’t just be released wherever. We had someone last weekend want to bring in a fox, but they didn’t really want it to get released back to their property since they have chickens. They told the person it’s not like you can just toss an animal wherever. They have families, some species don’t do well alone, and if you drop them someplace different than where they’re from it’s not like they magically know where food, water, or shelter are to be found. How well would any of us do dropped in a random place we’ve never been with none of our stuff?
Rehabbers don’t charge you if you bring them an animal. You can even text them a pic and they can say bring it in or they’ll come get it or just put it back where you found it. If we came upon a human in distress we wouldn’t try to treat them or diagnose them on our own (hopefully!) so why do so many want to do that to a random animal?
It’s good you at least tried to talk some sense into them! Animals are fragile in some ways, but still amazingly strong and adaptable at the same time. Good luck, little bun!
Yeah, I’m more in tune with nature and animal welfare than most non-hunters in my area.
We take deer off the landscape as a form of population management since their natural predators have been eliminated when my state was still a colony.
Keeps farmers happy, keeps people from hitting them with vehicles, and helps keep the family fed.
Just a note that cats carry all sorts of nasty diseases, and even if they don’t manage to kill their prey immediately they usually die of infection shortly after.
That’s what I told her. She said it was just being chased and that she got to it before the cat could get a hold of it.
I’m concerned about it being so young. I said she should have called a rehabber.
Per the Minnesota Wildlife Rehab Center, if she’s certain the cat never got it:
Best option is to release it back where she found it and keep an eye on it if she’s worried about the cat again.
Also if she has some greens like arugula, clover, basil, cilantro, or any lettuce except iceberg available those will sit better in the bunny’s tummy than carrots which have too much sugar.
I’m new to rehabbing this season, but when they showed us the baby rabbit room on our tour, they said the door is only opened twice and day and you’re not supposed to talk in there because babies rabbits are very susceptible to dying from stress.
This rabbit looks bigger than most of the ones in there, but if they want it to have the best chances of living and not getting too tame and unable to survive in the wild, it should go to a rehab ASAP.
That’s what I told them. They had already released it into a local field.
I deleted my reply after I saw that comment, but since you replied, I undeleted it.
Even adult animals shouldn’t just be released wherever. We had someone last weekend want to bring in a fox, but they didn’t really want it to get released back to their property since they have chickens. They told the person it’s not like you can just toss an animal wherever. They have families, some species don’t do well alone, and if you drop them someplace different than where they’re from it’s not like they magically know where food, water, or shelter are to be found. How well would any of us do dropped in a random place we’ve never been with none of our stuff?
Rehabbers don’t charge you if you bring them an animal. You can even text them a pic and they can say bring it in or they’ll come get it or just put it back where you found it. If we came upon a human in distress we wouldn’t try to treat them or diagnose them on our own (hopefully!) so why do so many want to do that to a random animal?
It’s good you at least tried to talk some sense into them! Animals are fragile in some ways, but still amazingly strong and adaptable at the same time. Good luck, little bun!
Yeah, I’m more in tune with nature and animal welfare than most non-hunters in my area. We take deer off the landscape as a form of population management since their natural predators have been eliminated when my state was still a colony.
Keeps farmers happy, keeps people from hitting them with vehicles, and helps keep the family fed.
Oh, very nice. I also go deer hunting for much the same reasons.
If she was really sure it wasn’t injured then it seems like it should just be released. Wild animals rarely make good pets.
They released it in a grassy field near her work.
At that point I guess it’s in nature’s hands. Godspeed, bunny.
I was concerned about the carrot. We have a chinchilla, and I know that it’s not good for them. She insists that her coworker knows what she is doing.
Narrator: She didn’t.
Probably not. There’s nothing I could do about it from 30 minutes away though.