File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
I was mowing the backyard yesterday, and when I turn around to my left, I see this long, black slender thing crawling in the grass, and then wiggles back, hiding itself.

I automatically assumed it was a snake, but it was so long and slender. I told my mom and we checked the area and I noticed a hole. I figured it was probably a bunny's nest, since I saw an adult bunny in that general spot a couple days before.

During the night, there was a storm and even a power outage. Today, when I took my dog out, I walked by the spot and noticed that the hole was gone, covered up by a pile of grass, probably from the storm.

I got a stick and pulled apart the grass, and sure enough, there was fur surrounding the hole, with two baby bunnies inside.

Satisfied knowing that they were bunnies and not moles or anything, I went back inside to wait for my dog to finish. Shortly after, I heard this strange noise going "Eee! Eee! Eee!" I thought maybe it was some weird bird.

I stepped out, and I see my dog, a golden retriever, poking her nose at a baby bunny two feet away from its nest, on its back, crying. I scream at my dog to get inside and check on the bunny. It was bleeding a little bit, but it rolled over and started digging in the grass.

I decided I needed to put the bunny back in its nest, because a lot of birds hang in my backyard and I didn't want them to eat the bunny, because then it would technically be my fault. It was too small to see over the grass to its nest anyways.
>> Anonymous
I got gloves and a plastic spoon and tried to scoop the bunny out, but it only dug deeper. I pulled aside the grass to see its head and it finally stopped struggling. I pushed it a bit with the spoon onto my hand and it crawled on by itself. It was missing a toe, and I think my dog grabbed it by its ear, since its ear was bleeding the most.

I was horrified for some reason. Its eyes couldn't open yet, and it was slightly bloody, and I couldn't make my hands stop shaking. I was afraid I'd drop it. I got it over the nest's entrance and it rolled over onto the ground, landing on its back. It crawled and dug back into the hole.

I left a piece of fruit for compensation for the trouble.

What do you think? Should I leave a note for the bunny's parents?
>> Anonymous
You should have put it out of its misery.