File :-(, x, )
Bunnies. I'm getting bunnies. Anonymous
Or rabbits. I don't know. They're small.

ALRIGHT /an/, I'M GETTING BUNNIES. I've never raised bunnies before. I have three dogs around the house already. Anyway. The three bunnies I'mma get are babies, probably a week or two old. They belong to my neighbour right now. And he's going to move next week. Tell me what to do for the bunnies, like what kind of box and cages they'll like and what they eat [inb4 carrots] and all that.

Tl;dr I'm getting 3x baby bunnies. I don't know how to raise bunnies.
>> Anonymous
nice animootion
>> Anonymous
Just get a cage that doesnt have a wire floor and make sure its big. rabbits need a hiding hole too, so make them one in the cage.
>> Anonymous
rabbit.org is gonna be your best resource
>> Anonymous
first of: GOOGLE MOTHER FUCKER, DO YOU USE IT?
we aren't going to do all this shit for you.

second: that is WAY to young for bunnies to be away from their mother! they should be 8 weeks! you already sound like a dumbass so i doubt you will be able to raise such young rabbits yourself.
>> Anonymous
>>253347
Abrasive anon is correct, far too young to be removed from the mother. 6-8 weeks is ideal.

Do NOT feed them vegetables until they are at least 6 months old, their stomachs can't handle it yet. Rabbit pellets and timothy hay only, a 50/50 diet of both. Once they're older they can start eating lots of veggies pretty much anything you can eat they can. Be sparing on fruit they're a little too high in acid and sugar for bunnies.
>> Anonymous
I'm suspecting OP of being a troll, but you never can tell these days.

If you take them from their mother and they're only 1 week old, they'll probably die. If you can take the mother as well she might reject them because of a sudden change in surroundings. (Do rabbits eat their babies like mice do?)

Even if they do survive and you bottle-feed them or if they're older than you say, three rabbits are going to need a pretty massive cage, probably constructed yourself. If they're dwarf rabbits, slightly smaller. Larger breeds, a lot bigger.

If you have a big yard, I'm of the opinion that wire-bottomed cages are okay as long as the wire netting is decently large so grass can poke through, droppings can fall out when the cage is moved, and small enough so the bunnies can't poke their heads out.

While they're babies, you'll probably need to keep them in a more solid cage because they can wriggle out of anything.

Introducing rabbits to fresh greenery should be done gradually or you'll give them stomach upsets and they could die from that as well.