Added: 2 years ago
From: jayellle
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  • Dont buy wire bottom they damage your bunnys nails people shouldent buy them dont listen to her

  • Cute bunnies! Dumb owner!

  • Just one point the wire cages you have chosen will cause lots of cuts on the bottom of their feet. Wire cages are not suitable for rabbits at all and I urge you to remove this video as you are not educated on rabbits. Plus all the cages you are recommending are too small!!!!!Also rabbits are not meant to be a CHEAP pet seriously, they cost just as much as a dog. Videos like this anger me at how niave people are. Im sorry but they look like animal testing cages and it is not fair

  • @MissBump4 ikr i hate when this happens btw im getting a rabbit and im gonna get it a C&C cage cause its good ive heard about it a lot too

  • @dogsandpuppys123 Ive seen them on other videos and they look good unfortunately they are not really available or promoted in the UK so many people use large dog crates and bunny proof. I just hate seeing bunnies in tiny cages regardless of the use: breeding or whatever. You cannot honestly tell me that the five welfare freedoms are enforced when they cannot live naturally when they cannot take more than two hops. If that was in the UK the person would be charged with cruelty x

  • U should not use alfalfa only use Timothy hay

  • I put a newspaper in my bunny cage. but he eat pages from the newspaper....please help

  • @Eritrean1996 They will do they think it is a fun game ! Try putting woodshavings or straw or hay over it x

  • you bunnies shoudn't be on a wire bottom cage all the time as they can hurt their feet! you need to have some sort of floor covering like cedar chips, hay or some other form of bedding on the bottom to prevent injuries to your rabbits.!

  • wow i love Ingrid Michaelson tooo!!!

  • another misinformed idiot!!!!!!!she hasn't a clue...

  • yeah they are easy to clean but haw are your rabbits feet ?

    its realy easy to train your rabbit with a clicker like you do with dogs.

  • I know I am in no position to talk, because I just got my second bunny this morning, but DONT use the wired bottoms. They will hurt their feet and get cuts. Then you will have to take them to the vet. So be smart, and go to petsmart, and get plastic bottomed cages for ALL your rabbits and also get them their OWN cage. Hello! Over Crowded, much?

  • @Hamsterdance2011

    were did you get your bunny? because i live in az and i was thinking of geting a baby dawf bunny and i was wondering were i can get one at?

  • @MegaBonzie Hey.. I got my bunny off of Craigslist. I dont RECOMMEND that website, but there are TONS of bunnys on there. Everyone I know keeps telling me to adopt one. So, I would think of adopting first!

  • A rabbit shouldn't have to live in an over crowded cage! It should be in a play run in the garden in all the fresh air and all the grass. Then at night it can be in a run. If your not bothered to give your rabbits something a little more than a dog cage in a corner than you are a bad owner.

  • 6:15 I will live my life as a lobster-mans wife... WTF?! hahahah

  • couldent you just litter train the bunnies, and clean the litter box (i think thats even less money than the news paper, since you have to buy like 5 or so a week..)

  • The wired bottom hurt their feet

  • your stupid

  • they could get sore hides from that wire bottom

  • I don't think the wire is very good for their feet

  • What breed is tink tink? Mine is the exact same one, even the color patterns are the same! he is such a cutie...little tink!

  • oh yeah and u wouldnt need a wired cage if u litter train them all u need to do is get a big litter box put some carefresh or other bedding that can absorb the wee put some hay in there and they will poo and wee there its really easy but its really up to yo so yeah just sayin

  • nice video but dont the wired bottom cages hurt your rabbits feet plus your cages are to small

  • nice video, crap cages. sorry but those cages are way tooooo small and the wire is horrible on their feet

  • i feel so bad for these rabbits its sad they have to be like these

    its beatiful seeing your rabbit run in grass eating enjoying the outdoors

    hopefully ill get a camera and show you how to take care of a rabbit properly

    u stupid bitches!!!

  • ok this my set up for my rabbits

    i have a big dog cage set up with wood shavings

    i have a shoebox that they hide in

    and in the morning i have a big side yard with grass and at each end i put a secured chicken wire and theres a cement wall

    and there morning to 6:00

    rabbits are never meant to be in cages all day u stupid little girls how would u like to be in a cage all your life

    if u dont have a grassy space they could roam around dont get one!!!!

  • All u guys crabbing about wire cages-D As long as there is a big enough resting space off the wire like a old towel of a piece of unused rug, it will be fine. I have a wire cage (not like this one) and my rabbit is litter trained (funny right) so I cover about 85 to 90% of the cage with a towel, and can let him rome the house and he always goes in his litter box.(saving up for hutch) :)

  • So basicly... instead of taking proper care of your rabbits and cleaning their cage, you're lazy, and give your rabbits uncomfortable wire bottom cages just so you don't have to clean them?And the cages?Too small.You shouldn't even have that many rabbits, when you don't even have anywhere to put them.Also, the hay/straw is one of the most important parts of the rabbits diet, so your pets must not have a very balanced diet.Rabbits can have litter boxes too,some even have SAFE pull out trays.

  • I'm assuming the brown and white adult rabbit isn't spayed since she has a litter. lol. I just got a rabbit and she's VERY high strung and can be aggressive. I assumed this was because she isn't spayed. But you were able to pet your rabbit with no problem! Is it just because you've spent so much time with her already? Give me some tips!

  • You can use an extra large dog crate as your rabbit cage, with a litterbox and a towel. Then attach a large pen, at least 6x4, to the crate so the rabbit can come out to run whenever it wants. Wire bottom cages are horrendous, and the ones in this video are WAY too small. My rats have a cage that size.

  • u have too many rabbits in one cage!!!!!!! and the wire bottom.....?

  • don't replace the bedding every week buy a cage BIG enough for bunnies!

  • its a shame,in the uk aperently you have to have them vaccinated 2X a year, not so here in the US which is why people can get away with basically hoarding rabbits like this and probably trying to sell the babies for a profit,disgusting,how many rabbits can you fit in one cage

  • @SilentOneLove I know, the UK is WAY ahead of us with their rabbit care. Pet stores and irresponsible breeders are half the reason so many rabbits are kept like the ones in this video--they don't tell people that rabbits need room to run and special care. A hutch is not enough, nor is a tiny cage where all they can do is sit and stare.

  • are those the baby bunnies of the big bunny?

  • lady not ladt srry

  • ladt your cage is small. it is too small for my two guinea pigs.

  • Aww u have got some really cute rabbits there! :-)

    Not being mean or something, but I personally think that the wire cage can be hurtful for bunnys.

    At least my bunny enjoys in her plastic bottomed cage ! :-D

  • I love 2:36 ! Soo cute!

  • You have too many rabbits..and certainly not enough space

  • they can be litter trained and that would eliminate the need for bedding and wire cages, they also can get sore hocks from those wire cages. Also keeping them in a cage 24/7 in my opinion is cruel, I know what im talking about because i've been keeping rabbits for over 9yrs

  • I subbed! Your bunnies seemed tp be very well taken care of and loved. No matter what everyone says. I love my bunny and this helped thanks.

  • Not being mean but you could just litter train your rabbits and have a c&c cage or plastic bottom cage ( with floor time ) . Those cages are very small and they dont have much to do in there .

  • i got a big house so my bunny get to go around it ll day long..i bulit a ramp for him so he can go up and down the stair...i never close the cage!! and he got a litter box on every floor

  • do you know how much the wire cages r because i was getting and my sister so it might be to big

  • awww soooo cute

    

  • Forgot to mention, the 2 story C&C cage cost me about $35 to build.

  • Make a C&C cage... It will take you a few hours to make but it is well worth it. My dwarf rabbit has a 2 story C&C cage. He has tons of places to hide, sleep, many chew toys, 2 water bottles and fresh veggies. The cage I made with "4-cube shelving units" or in other words metal grids. I used 2 boxes of them to create my condo. One part houses 2 guinea pig and above them I have the bunny area. They are completely separate but do live in the same condo. Please help your bunnies.

  • this is a good video... however your bunnies' cages are way too small... plus the metal at the bottom may be easy to clean but its harmful to thier feet. and with these sized cages (even though they are babies) you should not put more than 2 bunnies in the cage... also rabbits dont like just sitting on matts they also like to hide in places because that is their natural instinct.

  • the cage bottem will hurt their feet wont it??? not sure 

  • What singer?

  • The cage bottom is wired. I don't think that's a good thing.

  • where did u buy the cage?

  • This makes me very very sad. You should not be giving advice, you mean well, but are extremely I'll informed and by putting this out for public consumption you are encouraging Thera to mistreat their rabbits as well. Please people, be kind to your bunnies....fresh hay and water, 4 hours per day out of cages, litter box train, no wire bottom cages. This should be part of your family, otherwise why have a bunny at all?

  • This video really help me I am getting two bunnies like this weekend! I am getting a wired bottom cage aswell and like a towel or a place mat like yours to rest their feet thanks I think your videos are awesome!! :)

  • thanks this really helped me i'm getting a rabbit in November for my birthday!

  • ummmm not to be rude to other people that have rebbits but if you live on a farm you live on a farm you keep your rabbits in a decent size huch WITH A WIRE FLOOR SO the rabbits droppings can drop on the ground (mine have never gotten there feet cut or hung up because there rounded off and close to getther) because its good for the soil and the invirement it you hav bedding it wiill jus be in a land fill plus you could have a worm bed for fishing!!! I mean wild rabbits live out side.

  • 1. your cage is way too small

    2. having your bunnies hop on that wire could really hurt their paws and might cause bruises, maybe even cuts.

    3. let your bunnies out of the cage sometimes.

    I feel bad for your bunnies that they are stuck inside that small thing.

    You probably mean no harm but if you are going to make a help video, then you should check if how YOU are raising your bunnnies is right before telling other people to do what you have done.

  • Where did you get the timothy hay from?

  • what is the green on the food bowl? is it just a grass?

  • Bunnnnyy killlllllerrrr

  • u r a bunny killer!!!

  • Those cages are WAY to small! Wire flooring is painful and can cause bumble foot for rabbits. And since you're complaining so much about the price of bedding for a plastic floored cage, all you gotta do is litter train the bunny and use old towels for the rest of the cage. At the end of the week hose the towels off outside then all you gotta pay for is litter. :P

  • noooo no wired bar cageson the bottem are you crazy! it will hert ther feet and put them in pain

  • and how many bunnies do you have??

  • wire bottomes are hard on their feet though what may be most convinient for you may not be so for them :/

  • Your bunnies are adorable! I loved when you were explaining about the cage and the little gray bunny picked up the toilet paper roll and dropped it, so cute xD <3 Also, wire bottom cages are a definate big fat NO for bunnies! Truth is, your severely hurting them, sorry.! Better change them

  • your hurting the bunnys!!!!! wire bottoms hurt the rabbits feet no matter if you have matts and i,m not a bunny expert but i do know a few things and one thing is wire bottoms are small and hurt rabbits feet

  • Everyones being so mean to your video :(

    But i think your rabbits are fine, maybe just use more mats to cover the whole wire bottom, and yeah maybe a few more cages since you do have alot of rabbits :D

    But your video was cool :D

  • Comment removed

  • just to let you know ........OBVIOUSLY YOU DONT KNOW NOTHING ABOUT RABBITS WIRE BOTTOM CAGES I FIND CREWL THEY ARE HORRIBLE ON YOUR RABBITS FEET, YOU HAD ABOUT 6 RABBITS IN A CAGE THAT IS BARLY BIG ENOUGH FOR 1 RABBIT,AND YOUR BUNNIES LOOK LIKE THEY ARE GOING TO STRAIN THEIR NECKS JUST BECAUSE THEY WANT TO RE HYDRATE THEM SELVES

  • 2:17 couldnt you just litterbox train the rabbit ? and the cage with all the babys ,im not trying to be mean but the cage is WAY to small for all of them. do they have any hay ?

  • Umm I think it is time to get bigger cages... REASON: u have 6 bunnies in a small cramped corner....

  • I recommend the plastic floor. It's worth it because the wire bottomed cages can affect a rabbit's hocks and make them very sore.

  • 1.wire bottom cages are not good for your bunnys feet.especailly for you baby's tiny toes that can slip through easily

    2.that cage is wayyyyyy to small for even one bunny but you have multilpe,i cant really tell if thats one very small cage for all those bunnys or if thats different ones for all those bunnys becuase your cage or cages are soooooo cramped

    wow your bunni's must have a great life

  • at 02:38, the white bunny drinking from the bottle, what type of rabbit is it?

  • The cage is small, couldnt you just get a petstore cage with a towel and litter train them??? Plus floor time an hour a day? thumbs up if you agree

  • Your rabbits are so cute! It's fine to have wire bottoms. In my opinion, I like the wire bottoms better. Rabbits CAN get sore hocks if the rabbit is like 10 pounds. It's unlikely in smaller breeds. Sore hocks can be avoided with a mat to rest on even if the rabbit is bigger.

  • @SportySoccerBabe07 No, you are wrong. Wire bottomed cages can affect any rabbit - you should see the horrific cases of sore hocks I have seen on Netherland Dwarf rabbits due to them being kept in wire-bottomed cages. Cages with wire bottoms can cause awful lesions on the hocks with then become ulcerated. Even if your rabbits has a mat, the wire is extremely uncomfortable. I really don't understand how people can use wire-bottomed cages when they clearly cause discomfort.

  • @SportySoccerBabe07 Actually, a small rabbit is likely to get sore hocks too. If they sit on the wire bottomed cages too long, they will eventually have sore hocks. I do not recommend mats because if you don't litter train them, they will poop and pee in the mat, and you will have to change it almost everyday.

  • bunnies shouldnt have to rest there feet they shud be able to roam on comfortable ground w/o having to rest ther feet

  • wire bottom not good

  • wire bottom not goo

  • Wire bottom cages may be helpful for you, but hurt the rabbits feet. This gives them sores and also can keep them from walking often. Its not good for there feet. You should of stuck with the plastic bottom cage. Also your rabbits look cramped.

  • @squeky679 If you didn't watch the whole video she had plenty of places for them to rest there feet. I'm not trying to be just telling you.:D

  • @MsGerbler Yeh like tiny mats? You are almost as stupid as her!

  • the bunnies are to close and the wire cage is bad for there little feet.

    Maybe now u know while all ur bunnies died

  • they look like they are in one of those sad commercials that are like pleaseee adopt me!!

  • THE HELL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! wire bottems is hurtful I live in the middle-east and the pet shops here that have bunnies in wire bottem cages and break feet you stupid *****

  • @sassa0406 i know it is not good for rabbits to have wired bottoms but dont calll her that

  • where did you get those huge baskets hay? I'm really curious! :)

  • how mos. did u breed ur rabbits ?

  • do you have holland lop bunnies?

  • I havent owned a bunny before I was recommended this type of cage also but Im kinda worried for my bunnies feet...dont they get sores?

  • @elsaluvsyah01 What I did was go to an office store and buy a pack of storage cardboard boxes, using them to cover the wire floor. Thus they have something to stand on and they can chew it all they want. A 10 pack has lasted me over a year.

  • @elsaluvsyah01 yes, I have heard that they do get sores on their feet... so if you get a wired bottom get matts to put all over it for a break. more then she has :)

  • @vixitrixalina Dont worry, i am a rabbit expert, my mum breeds them, if anything she knows more than you ever will :) My rabbits will not be going back to the rspca, thank you very much for the unwanted concer but they showed us how to handle the rabbits and told us our hutch was the biggest theyd ever seen, these rabbits are pampered and would never have found a more long home. So yer, no need to worry, my rabbits love me!

  • "He likes to sit on his matt"

    Maybe because that's all your bunny has to do in his cage!

  • also in this video the male bunny had no hay, just pellets! and the hay box the mumma and the litter had didn't have much in... rabbits can eat a dense pile of hay the same size as them - with the babies there you'd want to double that. personally, where the babies all snuggled up by that litterbox were, i'd get a big wedge of hay from that bale and dump it in the corner there. they can sit on it, nest in it (thats the whole point of bedding) and eat it.

  • i do hope you got the bunnies spayed and neutered after those babies were born :-/ not only to prevent future litters (each bunny born means another being killed in a shelter) but to prevent the doe getting reproductive cancers. fixing them can double their life expectancy. Also they really shouldn't ever be on wire floors, even if they're only in there for a few hours, they don't have pads like cats and dogs and cannot comfortably stand and move on them and get sore hocks.

  • DON'T USE WIRE CAGES BECAUSE THERE FOOT CAN GET STUCK IN THE WIRE

  • awhh!! there are babiess((:

  • omg!!! you have the cutest dwarf bunnies!!! i looked for them at my local animal shelter they dont have them there and pet store (which was the last place i wanted to buy a bunny) BUT THEY DONT HAVE DWARF BUNNIES!!!!

  • Rabbits should not be walking on wire bottomed cages it can damage there feet!! Seriously your bunnies comfort should come before ''easy to clean''. Spot cleaning your pens daily is part of being a responsible pet owner. Your recommending a cage that isn't appropriate and new bunnie owners will take this for gospel!! Try making a C&C Cage and using fleece with washable mattress pads underneath which will draw any urine through the fleece and you won't have ''dirty bunnies''.

  • @hayleystorm You are veterinarian with a background related to Leporids?

  • You should never support your rabbitds back legs, if you support them then they could try and jump out of your arms, DUH! You should hold them under their armpits and let their legs dangle. I cant actually do this as one of my bunnies is untame and one is too fat too lift (we rescued them from the RSPCA).

  • @AvianFoster ....so many things wrong here...

  • @AvianFoster i strongly suggest you take your rabbits back to the RSPCA and never get anymore. rabbits HATE to be held. in the wild, the only time it's lifted off the ground is when its within the talons of a big bird or the jaws of an animal. if you must pick up a rabbit, its whole body must be firmly supported, INCLUDING its hide legs. rabbtis have extremely delicate backs and holding by their armpits can result in fatal injuries. by supporting the hindlegs the rabbit CAN'T kick!

  • Hypervitaminosis A can cause damage in the short term an example is where vitamin A causes cells to swell with fluid; too much vitamin A causes them to rupture in hyposmotic environments. You can have too much of a “good” thing.

  • Comment removed

  • your baby bunnies r SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO­OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO cute!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Your bunnies r really cute but bunnies cant live on wire floors its bad 4 them it hurts their feet! :/

  • if they were littler box trained it wouldnt stink!

  • acyually the wire is fine for tham and she did say her bunnies go in cages at night in a comment but i use wire in my hutch but also have a prat made of wood for them togo to when its cold outside and i also keep their food,water,veggies,etc. but im not a begginer i like to look at bunnies because i do like this judging thing at fair so i was just looking....anyway p.s. ur rabbits are sooo cute! one looks like mine lol good job haha

  • I don't mean to sound a jerk but fresh veggies are a necessity. They love dark green veggies, corn, tomatoes, sweet peppers , basal, tomatoes, artichokes, and carrots of course. I mean you may already do this but a it could be a topic for another video. Maybe you already did it. Sorry if thats the case. I have 13 rabbits and they all have different favorites. Red cabbage, sunflower seeds, you name it.

  • @nontrashfire corn is actually bad for rabbits, to high in sugars and starch.

  • @LittleKitten6 Corn to quote the cookie monster is a “sometimes food”. If you go to a reputable site such as rabbit.org they make no mention of corn pro or con. However many sites an books will list corn plant as a toxic plant. Dracaena Fragrans is the plant they are referring to. Where I am referring to Zea mays L. What you are referring to is that the sugars and starches that the small intestine can't digest will wind up in the cecum.

  • @nontrashfire i didn't need a lecture. you were saying corn was ok, when you should be saying its ok now and then and not in large quantity's. to stop those who are new to rabbits accidently giving them way to much as it said on your Chanel that it was ok. It may not be on sites, but repeatable breeders and those that own rabbits will tell you too much is bad for them. no need to take offence.

  • @LittleKitten6 I'm sorry it seems like I offended you. The problem with my first response seemed to be the brevity of it. If the cookie monster seemed to be an implication suggesting you were immature I again apologize. It only related in context and the topic of vegetables as of 2004 with his change. Particularly with corn there are tons of myths from being inedible to causing obesity.

  • @LittleKitten6 I needed to clear up for the inexperienced that there was a half truth to what you said and what about it was true and to what extent it was true.  Terms like “large” are too relative try using quantitative values. I never stated a specific amount myself. After all the internet is at their fingertips they should never stop at one source and of only one perspective to gather facts. Too often studies are skewed with biases and are improperly conducted/ presented.

  • @LittleKitten6 Be careful what breeders say in particular. One doesn’t need an education to become a breeder. Too often any attained knowledge is second hand and at the expense of the animals they are raising. Yes, the education part extends to even reputable breeders. Again it looks like you were hurt by my response but I didn’t say you were wrong just that it wasn’t the full truth. Again I didn’t give an exact quantitative value. As with the staple foods in their diet limitations are needed.

  • @LittleKitten6 The average pellets are far from the only food source a rabbit needs. They need large and small plant fibers; pellets provide only small and lead to lethargic behavior when over feed. It task up to 12hours to process small fiber and 5 hours for large. Any properly educated dietary veterinarian with a background related to Leporids. You need to be careful when conversing on the internet. Only 10-20% of a conversation is verbal. The subtleties of conversation are lost when typed.

  • @LittleKitten6 If they arrive in large quantities in the cecum, they encourage the overgrowth of toxin-producing bacteria with consequent illness to the rabbit. This is why you should always monitor the intake of every rabbit pre and post digestion.  Adult rabbits absorb protein in the small intestine (up to 90%), but this depends on the source. The protein in soybean meal is very digestible, but a high portion of the protein in alfalfa (which is largely bound to the plant cell wall)

  • @LittleKitten6 is indigestible to rabbits. Rabbits digest cellulose poorly (Fraga 1990). You should from time to time take apart and examine the rabbits scat, observe what is and isn’t being digested; the sooner after excretion the better. Back to moderation Vitamin A helps form and maintain healthy teeth, skeletal and soft tissue, mucous membranes, and skin. However too much A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine followed 2322 men in Sweden for 30 years.

  • @LittleKitten6 Researchers found that the fracture risk was greatest in men with the highest blood levels of retinol, one of the most active forms of vitamin A. Another study found similar results. The Nurses Health Study looked at 72,337 postmenopausal women over an 18 year period and found that women who consumed at least 3000 mcg a day as retinol equivalents were 48% more likely to have a hip fracture compared to women whose daily intake was less than 1250 mcg (4125 IU) per day.

  • i loveeeee that brown and white one please tell me wher you got him\her pleeeeease!!!!!!

  • the brown and white bunny is sooooo cute  where did you get it because i want one

  • don't use the paper towel roles because of the glue the people used to make the role and it can make your bunnies sick

  • where did you get the safeguard cages in the video?

  • wired bottoms hurt the bunnies feet because their feet are not padded like dogs or cats :(

  • my rabbit died!!!!:(

  • @optimus4716 Sorry to hear it died, but you really should have taken it to the vet right after the cat attacked it. Not only are you responsible for feeding and loving your pets, but also for making sure they get medical attention when they are sick or hurt.

  • @optimus4716 oh im soooooooooooooo sorry what happened

  • really great video nice info!

  • i have 2 rabbits one of my rabbit got injured because a cat got in the house and the cat scratch a skin of my rabbit :( i am so scared because i am thinking that he going to die please can you tell me how to heal the wounds

  • @optimus4716 Well, for starters you should take him to the vet..

  • where do we get the cage ur using right now and i want to boothfeeds and they dont show me the price

  • Where's their hidy houses?,

    Beautiful bunnies and a great video,but the plastic bottom cages are better than the wired ones because rabbits can get sore feet from standing on the wire bottoms and wire cages can be week and break and the bunny may become trapped.

    Your rabbits are soo cutttee though!

    && a great video!!!

  • @AnimalLuver356 Wire cages really need two layers of wire. One reason beaing as you mention you need a smaller gauge wire to avoid discomfort. In addition to that a flat nonporous surface is needed for eating their cecotropes. The second layer or wire of a stronger gauge to prevent feral animals from penetrating the wire. Even a little fox will break and enter 1/4" mesh wire. If proper stainless wire or electro-coded wire is used it will last well beyond your rabbits life.

  • i want those bunnies hehhe <33

  • Have they ever got aggressive with you, or bitten you?

  • awww i love your baby bunnies :)))) their sooo cuteeeeee

  • are you gonna sell your baby bunnies?

  • I love them!!!!

  • sorry i dont mean to be a hater but, that cage is way too small :(

  • But dont wired bottom cages hurt ur bunnnie if they sleep against it unlike plastic bottom cages

  • I went to a rabbit doctor and I ask if you should get a wire ground cage or a regular cage that has a plastic bottom they said get the flat plastic bottom because when the rabbits are on wire to long they get bumps on the bottom of the feet and can couse there feet to be sore but anyway I love your bunnies they are so cute and also thanks for the advice I am getting a rabbit next week and it is my very first rabbit so yeah

  • Those Baby bunnies are adorable!!!!

  • i loves the babys

  • do the bunnies' feet get stuck in the wire botton?

  • my bunny loves being held

  • where did you get the mats, i can't find them anywhere!?

  • I'm guessing you bred your bunnies? Wow just more rabbits without homes

  • i'd suggest you get rid of the wire bottom, as those can cause damage and hurt your bunnies' foot.

  • metal grid bottom cages arent good

  • do hay pellets work as timothy hay

  • i love that pic at the end where the bunny is in bread

  • what hay do baby bunnies eat. iheard thet they eatcalfalfa pellets and alfalfa hay

  • I like the video soo much the bunnies are cute, I didn't watch this because I am a frist timer bunny owner but I might be getting a new one and it ha been so long sinse I had one so I just wanted to see what cages were best now.

  • i'm so lucky all my bunnies let me pet them all over and not just their head! though my female bunny, it took her time to get there. she'd run away all the time, but now she's good :)

  • hey jayellle its me again i just wanted to ask u that do u keep ur bunnies outdoors?? cause everybody tells me that bunnies die when they r kept outdoors but my 2 holand lop bunnies r kept outside and they re happy. SORRY for the long message but how old was ur little (TINK) when she got pregnant??? pls answer and thanx (^_^)

  • Hey jayellle its me again ... i just wanted to ask u do u put ur bunnies outdoors??

    cause everybody tells me that bunnies usually die if they r outdoors but i have my 2 holand lop bunnies outside and they re happy.how old was ur TINK when she got pegnant .. pls answer and thanx (^_^)

  • Hey jayelle , amm I don't think that wired cages r good for rabbits even though u have a mat. Their nails get stuck and break. Amm and u have a website? Cause u said u can sell ur bunnies. Pls answer....

  • 1. Good video but i have a few problems with it.

    2. Wire cages are a big NONO as it is bad for the rabbis feet even if you trim there nails

    3. If you buy a rabbit you should take care of it not matter how much it costs.

    4. rabbits should have ad lib hay in there cage as there gut need to move constantly or they will get a blockage.

    Good video tho.

  • how much do the wired cages cost?

  • Thanks :D! great video!