Rabbit Radar

Shadow has Rabbit RadarOnce again Shadow’s radar ability astonishes. I don’t know how he does it, whether it is sensing or hearing or a combination of both. He is so fine tuned to knowing where and when something is happening that needs his rabbit investigation:

  • Open a closet door, Shadow will be hopping in shortly
  • Start petting Tigger’s head, no matter where he is in the house, Shadow will  come running, me too!
  • Sit down to read a book or magazine, he will hop up
    wanting to chew the pages

Tigger has the same radar ability, but has less interests than Shadow does.  If you turn on the faucet in the kitchen or start to open a bag of greens, Tigger will be there, dancing on the edge of the dining room rug.  Sometimes she comes skating across the linoleum on the kitchen floor in her excitement to get to new food.

Both have one interest in common, treats!  Rattle anything that sounds like a container with treats and they are not only there, but dancing up and down on their back two legs like crazy rabbits.  Fresh bananas are a special treat and we need to sneak them out to the patio, garage or other areas if we want to eat them in peace.  I thought it was the smell that they were fine tuned to, until I realized that Shadow was repeatedly showing up before I even had the skin off the banana, usually when I first snapped it.  The boy recognizes the sound of a banana about to be opened!

It continues to amaze me just how much rabbits are able to recognize if you give them the chance to interact and roam around freely.

Shadow Shares A Secret

ShadowEarlier this month I wondered if their was some body language or very quiet secretive  rabbit to rabbit communication going on between Tigger and Shadow. It has always confused us over the past ten years how they will suddenly go from lovey dovey snuggling together to jumping up and outright fussing with each other or humping heads and chasing.  We are always left scratching our heads wondering what started that change in behavior.

This weekend, Shadow shared a secret with me. I was flat on my stomach on the floor petting Tigger when Shadow hopped up beside me and stuck his nose in my ear.  It was horrendously ticklish with all those whiskers, like having a Daddy Long Legs suddenly walk in.  I was about to jump away when I realized I was hearing an extremely soft squeaking type of sound.  It wasn’t excited or scared, just a very soft, very low vocalization.  I ignored the tickling and stilled myself to listen to Shadow just squeaking a little message to me.

Shadow was clearly talking to me and so softly that if he hadn’t had his nose right in my ear, I would not have heard it at all.  I was amazed and wondered if this is the type of communication that they regularly have with each other that would be way too quiet for our human ears to hear. 

In the past, I have read of rabbit squeaks and they were always associated with a scared or terrified rabbit.  Tigger has a mewing cry at times when she is ill or we are holding her to medicate her.  That clearly is a fear based sound.

This was an entirely different type of squeak, more musical, one I would describe as just Shadow trying to say something to me and making sure I heard it by putting his nose right up in my ear.  Tigger and Shadow often stick their noses in each other’s ears and usually grooming is involved.  I always assumed it was just grooming, now I wonder if they are also squeaking out little messages to each other too.

I feel like Shadow let me in on another piece of the rabbit puzzle.

Follow Friday – LOL Rabbits Video

I found this funny rabbit video on You Tube.  You can check out making your own funny captioned pictures at I Can Has Cheez Burger.

Here is the link to the video on You Tube if it isn’t working properly here: http://youtu.be/ARM_CqUkrvY.

Fun Photo

Bunny sticking tongue out

Yuck, icky tasting grass!

Popping in quickly here this evening.  We were with power and without power on and off as thunderstorms rolled through here this afternoon.  That is a mixed blessing.  We need the rain, but not being able to trust the power to use the Internet is hard when you have web based businesses!

Follow Friday – The Language of Lagomorphs

The Language of Lagomorphs Website

Click to go to website

Ever found yourself wondering what on earth your bunny was trying to tell you? The Language of Lagormorphs has in-depth information to help you learn rabbitspeak.

If you are new to rabbits, I would recommend the sections on Offendedness, Territoriality and Anger first. Misunderstanding rabbit language in these instances can lead to bunny bites, not fun.  Here is a full list of the behaviors and corresponding articles:

  • Introduction
  • Hierarchy – Prove That You Love Me
  • Grooming – Yeah Baby, I Like It Like That
  • Gazing – Ah, This is the Life
  • Nose Wiggling – Follow My Nose
  • Offendedness – R-E-S-P-E-C-T is What My Bun Demands of Me
  • Territoriality – Gimme Some Space, Man
  • Anger – Why, You Fiend!
  • Sadness & Fear – Alas, Woe is Me
  • Curiosity – Hmm, What Do We Have Here?
  • Begging – Pleeeease Oh Please Please Please!
  • Play – Yippie Skippie!
  • Racing – The Need for Speed
  • Shudders – Shiver Me Timbers!
  • Binkies – Did You Say Binky?
  • Signoff – In the Interest of Interspecies and Intraspecies Relations

I have a fun You Tube video, I will post later today!

Rabbit to Rabbit Communication

Tigger & Shadow sweetly napping togetherAfter ten years of having Tigger and Shadow, I have come to the conclusion that how they communicate with each other will remain a mystery.  You look at this picture and just think, “Awwww, such cute bunnies”.  I have a lot of pictures just like this and they are so adorable!   

Then you have the flip side, the one I don’t usually get on film.  occasionally, right after a moment like this, one or the other will suddenly get up, hump the others head, nip a behind, bat paws on the other, push or shove or chase the other off.

Blaine or I get them sorted out again and settled down, usually side by side or head to head for petting.  They go back to being sweethearts.  We are left shaking our heads wondering what on earth they said to the other to go from snuggles to arguing.

We often wonder if there is bunny body language we are missing or some sound they make too quiet for us to hear.  Maybe they can feel some change in the other’s body when they are that close.  I know rabbit’s noses are really sensitive, perhaps somebunny starts giving off a scent that is mood related.

We do know that Tigger keeps score on who grooms who more.   If we are watching them and see her doing most of the grooming, we will start to pay attention to petting both of them right away before she gets aggravated that she isn’t getting her fair share.

That doesn’t seem like the whole of it, though, because Shadow gets miffed with her too,  even though she does more grooming of him than he does of her.  This appears to be a secret that the rabbits intend to keep.  I don’t think they want us breaking that rabbit to rabbit code.

Bonded on Their Terms This Time

Shadow & Tigger

Napping in the sun together

That first bunny marriage for Tigger and Shadow lasted a year. Then Shadow became deathly ill with an inner ear infection.  He stopped eating and drinking. The vet asked us to separate them so that we could closely monitor him. Reluctantly, we did for the first 48 hours until it was clear he was eating an drinking again.  After that, we let Tigger out to share run time with him.  She ran to him clearly showing she meant to groom his head.  He growled at her, lunged, and started chasing her around the room.

The vet suggested keeping them separate until Shadow was off antibiotics.  Two months later, as Shadow was coming off meds, Tigger developed an inner ear infection of her own. This time the vet asked us to move them to separate parts of the house with no contact at all until we got them both infection free.

So, four long months later, we began the rebonding process. We thought perhaps it would go well, because they had both showed signs of loneliness while apart. This time was bumpier than the first time. Now they had issues with each other. It was clear Tigger was holding a grudge.

For two years we tried off and on to rebond them without any real progress. They weren’t trying to kill each other, but they weren’t getting friendlier either. They would start out amiable or ignoring each other and then a head humping or butt nipping incident would lead to a chase, and lock down for both.  They were both holding grudges and no one was giving an inch.

We had pretty much given up hope when we noticed a change taking place. Their cages had remained side by side.  During their separate run times, Shadow started spending a lot of time flopped by Tigger’s cage when he would be out.  Then Tigger started flopping beside his cage on her runtimes.  Then they started grooming each other through the cage bars. 

We started trying “door dates”.  We would open the door of the locked up bun’s cage, pet both of them and allow them to groom each other at the door. Shadow would even come running if we called “door date”. After a few months as jailhouse lover’s, we tried letting them out again for short run times together.

This time around, we decided to do “bunding” instead of bonding. In bonding we were trying to define their relationship in terms of what we felt a good bunny bond should be. We decided to let Tigger and Shadow define their relationship on their own terms and be “bunded” instead.

The result is a pair that share their run times, but have separate cages. They have a good relationship most of the time, but they will have occasions where they fuss with each other, like a grumpy old married couple.  They get a little pushy shovy or might hump a head or chase the other off.  We allow this, because it never progresses further.  They aren’t out to harm each other. 

The little stinkers have proved to us conclusively that humans aren’t the only ones who have weird on again off again relationships. When they go to the vet, they look like the best bonded bunny couple in the world. They spend the minimum two-hour round trip in a carrier together without the least bit of fussing. For Tigger and Shadow it is clearly you and me against the world if they have to go out.

These two have always been incredibly high energy bunnies. Looking back, I don’t know why we thought they would ever be total snuggle bunnies all the time. Tigger and Shadow have a high-spirited relationship. They have “bunded” themselves quite well and love their shared run times, but also love their separate alone times in their own cages.

On the Bunny Bonding Trail, uh Trial

Tigger & Shadow in a quiet momentOkay, I freely admit right up front that when it comes to bonding bunnies, we did almost everything possible wrong. We had always seen bunnies snuggling together and had no idea you couldn’t just put two of them together. We got Tigger first, realized she was lonely, and brought Shadow home a couple of months later as a companion.

The only thing we did right was to keep to separate cages and run times until they were altered. We didn’t believe the vet was correct that we had two females. Thank heavens for our gut feeling, since little Shadow was hiding his male status quite well. During the month we were housing them side by side with separate play times, we realized that getting them together was going to be harder than we thought.

Tigger had lost that lonely feeling, now she had a purpose in life. Unfortunately, her new mission meant trouble for Shadow’s well-being.  That rabbit had invaded her space and she would patrol the perimeter of his cage and try to nip him if he came too close to the bars.  Shadow was smart and stayed away.

I thought I would get them used to seeing each other while feeling somewhat protected.  So, I tried holding Shadow while Tigger was out running.  However, Shadow surprised me and decided to take the offensive.  He dived out of my arms making a beeline for Tigger.  She was quite ready to meet this challenger head on.  I grabbed Shadow right before they reached each other and got the bite he intended for Tigger.  I told Blaine about my foolishness and suggested we needed to regroup and find a game plan.  Blaine decided when I wasn’t there to repeat my experiment and got the same results, except the bite he got came from Tigger.

We needed help.  Being admitted computer geeks, we went online and found the House Rabbit Society. We read all the bonding material and talked to local people and knew the road ahead was going to be a bumpy one. We now had altered bunnies, so hormones were fading and that was good.  However, we weren’t starting out with great snuggle bunny personalities, we had alpha rabbits. 

We started real slow with just five-minute dates in neutral territory in a bathroom and adjoining hallway.  At first they really didn’t even want to be in the same room together.  Sometimes we would end up with a rabbit flopped along the bathroom wall with  the other flopped along the hallway wall with just their heads out together in the open doorway so that we could pet them jointly.  They clearly weren’t very trusting of each other.

We built up their time together over three long months. Gradually, we introduced them to their shared space and then had a beautiful bonded couple 24/7 who shared their cage and runtime.  As the picture shows, we had a success!  Yeah, well sort of, the rest of the story later today.  What we didn’t realize is that we had the Liz Taylor and Richard Burton of the bunny world …

Binkies !

They say a picture is worth a thousand words, in this case a video can show you what a binky is if you haven’t seen one before.  This little bunny has all kinds of variety of binkies down.

I don’t know who coined the term binky for these leaping bunny moves, but it has the right lighthearted happy feel to match the act.  Bunnies will binky as they run and play.  I have seen our rabbits use them to change course in mid-air.  When they touch down, they will be running off in a completely different direction.  I have seen them do twists and turns and click their paws together before they come back down.  It is not only a bunny having a lot of fun, but is so athletic and acrobatic!

It is another one of those unexpected facets of rabbits.  With their proportionately heavy looking backsides, who expects them to be aerodynamic like this?

Here is the link to the video if it isn’t working for you here: http://youtu.be/O_XJss15fj0

Fur Therapy

Pet the Bunny
Ahhhhh Yes!

Tigger just presented herself to me to be petted.  For Tigger that means she hops up to where I am and gets my attention.  If I am sitting somewhere reading, she will rise up on hind legs so that her head peaks over the edge of the seat.  Once our eyes meet, she goes back down and hens up on the floor.  Tigger is a bunny who wants to be petted by invitation.  It is an invite we gladly accept.  She has the softest baby fine fur that is so incredible to touch and stroke.  When she settles down and starts to tooth purr, awwww! 

 
Shadow doesn’t give special invitations, he is ready to be petted whenever your hand touches his head.  He also seems to have petting radar and comes running anytime that Tigger is being petted.  He just can’t get enough of having his head petted.  If you stray off his head, you will be reminded by his head butting your hand to stay focused.
 
Petting a rabbit becomes addictive.  Their fur is so wonderful to touch and having them stretch out and start to purr and become putty under your hands provides a special bond.
 
So it is no wonder to me to hear that some rabbits have become Fur Therapists and visit hospitals or senior centers.  Both rabbits and humans benefit from the loving touch of stroking the bunny.  However, my two would never be candidates for professional therapy bunnies.  They are way too crazy active even at ten years old. 
 
I worked for an assisted living center once several years ago that had cats and dogs visiting and someone suggested I should bring my rabbits.   Well that would have been like creating a bunny version of the Mississippi Squirrel Revival  as sung by Ray Stevens. 
 
We will just keep the fur therapy private between us and the two rabbits here on their  home turf.  It is a real joy to take regular bunny breaks, taking time out of the day to pet the rabbits, everybunny wins!

Bunny Drill

Tigger on PatrolLittle Tigger will take off at top speed and Shadow immediately assumes that there must be danger and shoots off at the same time. She will often sound the alarm when he is in the bunny latrine.  So his take off will come with a spray of litter into the air. Sometimes they are a tandem pair of rabbits running full speed looking for all the world as if they are harnessed together. At other times they take off in opposite directions. If we are lucky one or both of them will fly up the stairs, dive under the bed, and start thumping out danger signals. If we are unlucky they will run in opposite directions and come diving into a tunnel from different directions, meeting in the middle in a head on bunny collision.

Tigger is quite a vigilant bunny sentry in responding to knocks on the door, phones ringing, and anyone walking into the room. When it comes to movement or noises, Tigger has a hare trigger. She is very catlike in patrolling the perimeter and can often be seen flopped on top of the cage using the high ground to maintain surveillance. Tigger and Shadow are housed on the second level of a tri-level home and Tigger will also station herself at the stair landing on the second floor to be able to monitor anyone coming up or down the staircases.

Tigger on High AlertOur bunny drills are initiated by the warden of the warren, Miss Tigger, our Tiny Terror, aka Freakazoid. She is always on full alert for anything she deems out of the ordinary. Basically, almost anything moving or making noise in the room that isn’t her.

In stark contrast to the very relaxed cute kitty flops that I wrote about earlier, this hyper alertness make us feel at times that we have a psycho bun with a split personality. She can go from completely relaxed to running full speed in the blink of an eye.

I have lost count of the number of drills that we humans have set off by sneezing. No germ in the world is going to get close enough to Tigger to get her! However after such thoughtless offenses on our part, our bunny sentry will often give us that look for startling her and setting off a false alarm.

The bunny drills were more upsetting when they were younger. Now, I guess I’ve gotten used to a bunny on patrol and Tigger has settled down some in what she recognizes as a danger.  We finally realized that if we talk to her as we move around or come into rooms, she stays alert but doesn’t go too crazy.  At least they still get some exercise as they get older.