Essays
Here at rabbit.org, we pride ourselves on our dedication to sharing not just the HOW of doing things, but also on the WHY.
Until the warmth of friendship brings this rosebud into bloom, we will handle her thorns with care.
SO YOU want a perfect animal. One who greets you at the door, who licks your […]
Still Wild Because we share our homes and lives with animals domesticated relatively recently (about […]
Boys and girls are socialized differently while growing up and make the transition into traditional […]
Since the earliest days of the Internet, rabbits and all things rabbit have been flourishing online
Don’t let the media dictate your views on rabbit meat. Rabbits are companions, not dinner.
To be a true rabbit person you must be more concerned that your bunnies are happy in their environment than you are with how well they meet your demands.
Some people have mixed feelings about keeping disabled rabbits alive when so many healthy ones are being euthanized in shelters.
Generosity is giving without compensation. So, stop rescuers and fosterers generous.
Confusion exists in people’s minds when dealing with crippled, deformed, or less than “perfect” animals. […]
Some thoughts on the arbitrary distinction between who we eat and who we cherish.
Save two lives instead of only one and your care may also turn out to be twice as easy.
Of all earth’s creatures, why do rabbits warrant special consideration?
Those of us who share our lives with non-human animals know the joy these friendships bring us.
Not a treatise against petting, but a sketch of other places you can visit with your rabbit.
Promoting responsible rabbit adoption in families instills enduring values of compassion and care in children.
When asked to name the first three things that came to mind about rabbits, in […]
The more lives you pay attention to, the more you learn about those particular lives and about the craft of paying attention.
preposition, n. A class of words that typically express a spatial or temporal relationship. In […]
Your rabbit is my rabbit now. She wasn’t sick, but she was emaciated and exhausted.
Rabbits are prey animals. Sometimes we might be lured into forgetting that.
Nine years in, my foster home prioritizes space and freedom for 20-25 “unadoptable” rabbits, contrasting with the few caged, adoptable ones awaiting homes.
Those who live by stereotyping, pigeon-holing, or typecasting need not apply.