MeggyM
Well-Known Member
HELP! Litter Box training the Impossible!
I recently adopted my second rabbit and his potty habits are out of control!
He is said to be 2 years old and has been fixed for the 3 months I have had him. Clover is mostly bonded to my female, Olive, and living harmoniously with her in a pen while I’m away, and roaming in my room together when I’m home to supervise.
Since my first rabbit was practically litter box trained when I adopted her and has had relatively few issues with it, I figured I could easily train a rabbit who previously lived in an outdoor enclosure and was use to going wherever he pleased. Not to mention rabbits naturally go in the same place. Not this boy. He is fearless, confident, smart, but could not care less!!
I’ll try to just outline the themes I’ve been tracking:
-Clove is pretty dominant but has mostly gotten over his marking phase except for one main place: my dog’s beds. He tries to boss my 60lb dog around and is clearly marking her beds.
However, that being said, I have removed ALL absorbent materials from his reach and keep him away from the couch and bed.
I have tried spraying vinegar or apple cider vinegar on the dog bed but it did not work so I just removed them all for now.
-For some reason he seems better in my room, and even better when I am in there/watching him, than in the pen.
The bun’s have their corner with litter boxes, water, toys and a plastic mat to let Clove know that is his area and to minimize him going outside that area. It works, but he still goes all over that mat. I could handle this if it were only poop…
-Clove is lazy! Hear me out, I love the boy, but he will wake up from a nap, sit up, poop, and then just pee right in the middle of his mat…!!!! What?! Or be munching on hay pellets on his mat and need to pee, then back him self up somewhere - even though I block all corners and walls so he does not have a flat wall to back up against, but he’ll just pee against something anyway instead of hopping into the litter box 1 ft away. Or he’ll finish eating hay in the litter box, hop out for a long drink, and instead of hopping back in, back himself up somewhere close by and pee right there.
-I tried adding more litter boxes, tried different types of boxes, and making his pen smaller, this seemed to help at first but in the end it was back to normal. I also try to keep the boxes pretty clean but that only helps a little too…
-I clean up after him constantly and use vinegar on the area so he learns that is not where I want him to go, but he must be so use to going wherever he wants that nothing I do works…!!
-He’s a smart boy too, which makes this even more frustrating… I do not know what to do!!!
To sum up the problem: I have a new bunny who is very use to using the bathroom wherever he pleased within his enclosure. He is rather lazy with his litter box habits and doesn’t seem to mind, or understand that it matters where he goes and does NOT go. Nonetheless, he somehow understands not to go all over a room and keeps his mess more or less contained to the "bunny area" or pen with the exception of marking the dog bed.
Open to any and all opinions and suggestions, even if they are critical and perhaps you think the problem could be something other than what I’ve outlined.
Thanks!
Meggy
The cute culprit!
I recently adopted my second rabbit and his potty habits are out of control!
He is said to be 2 years old and has been fixed for the 3 months I have had him. Clover is mostly bonded to my female, Olive, and living harmoniously with her in a pen while I’m away, and roaming in my room together when I’m home to supervise.
Since my first rabbit was practically litter box trained when I adopted her and has had relatively few issues with it, I figured I could easily train a rabbit who previously lived in an outdoor enclosure and was use to going wherever he pleased. Not to mention rabbits naturally go in the same place. Not this boy. He is fearless, confident, smart, but could not care less!!
I’ll try to just outline the themes I’ve been tracking:
-Clove is pretty dominant but has mostly gotten over his marking phase except for one main place: my dog’s beds. He tries to boss my 60lb dog around and is clearly marking her beds.
However, that being said, I have removed ALL absorbent materials from his reach and keep him away from the couch and bed.
I have tried spraying vinegar or apple cider vinegar on the dog bed but it did not work so I just removed them all for now.
-For some reason he seems better in my room, and even better when I am in there/watching him, than in the pen.
The bun’s have their corner with litter boxes, water, toys and a plastic mat to let Clove know that is his area and to minimize him going outside that area. It works, but he still goes all over that mat. I could handle this if it were only poop…
-Clove is lazy! Hear me out, I love the boy, but he will wake up from a nap, sit up, poop, and then just pee right in the middle of his mat…!!!! What?! Or be munching on hay pellets on his mat and need to pee, then back him self up somewhere - even though I block all corners and walls so he does not have a flat wall to back up against, but he’ll just pee against something anyway instead of hopping into the litter box 1 ft away. Or he’ll finish eating hay in the litter box, hop out for a long drink, and instead of hopping back in, back himself up somewhere close by and pee right there.
-I tried adding more litter boxes, tried different types of boxes, and making his pen smaller, this seemed to help at first but in the end it was back to normal. I also try to keep the boxes pretty clean but that only helps a little too…
-I clean up after him constantly and use vinegar on the area so he learns that is not where I want him to go, but he must be so use to going wherever he wants that nothing I do works…!!
-He’s a smart boy too, which makes this even more frustrating… I do not know what to do!!!
To sum up the problem: I have a new bunny who is very use to using the bathroom wherever he pleased within his enclosure. He is rather lazy with his litter box habits and doesn’t seem to mind, or understand that it matters where he goes and does NOT go. Nonetheless, he somehow understands not to go all over a room and keeps his mess more or less contained to the "bunny area" or pen with the exception of marking the dog bed.
Open to any and all opinions and suggestions, even if they are critical and perhaps you think the problem could be something other than what I’ve outlined.
Thanks!
Meggy
The cute culprit!