LemongrassMichelle
Member
Hello! (If you're upset with me for having bunnies in a classroom, please read the back-story at the end of this post...)
I am wondering what the best hutch situation would be for a single Dwarf Dutch bun that lives in a classroom and is allowed free-roam of the class during the day. Also, what about a bonded pair of Dwarf Dutches in the classroom next door? I'm looking for the hutch to be a home-base and litter area, but they're confined to the hutches at night and on weekends. What they have now is not working (both size and style) and I would like to make it easy on the teachers to have in their room, clean, etc. Links to various options would be extremely helpful!
BACK-STORY:
I was introduced to bunnies as pets when I adopted a dwarf bun from my job last summer. I run a summer camp program called Tiny Farm Camp which has a small farm space (large gardens really) and houses several animals for the summer months. On the farm we have chickens, dwarf goats and miniature horses. Last year they adopted 4 dwarf bunnies from a local shelter, bought hutches, and used those rabbits for the rabbits class. When I took over the program mid-summer they were transporting the bunnies daily from an air-conditioned classroom/office where they lived in their hutches to the farm where the class took place in the shade and the morning, back to the classroom and their hutch. The camp director let the buns out of their hutches for 1-2 hours a day, but they often didn't even leave the hutch. They had a bonded pair of sisters and a pair of brothers that un-bonded after neutering, so they kept them separate. One of the single males didn't do well at all with the kids, so I brought him home at the end of the program and adopted him. The others were put into classrooms (K-2) for the school year.
After having the "antisocial" bunny (Pepe) for about 2 months, he changed completely and became a part of our family. I did a ton of research on house rabbits, gave him free roam of the house (although he never left my son's room) and he bloomed into a loving little dude.
This year I ran the farm program from day 1 and have been working with the classroom teachers as far as diet (they were feeding mainly pellets and a little hay) and exercise. Both classroom teachers were open to the idea of free-ranging in their room, and the bunnies took to it well. However, when I picked up the bunnies this year, it was desperately clear that they were not cleaning the hutches enough. They were damaged from rabbit pee in the corners which should have been avoidable had they been spot cleaning daily. The hutch for the bonded pair was also too small for the sisters. The rabbits (by order of the administration) had to be caged when the teacher left for the day or if there was a substitute.
I know that putting rabbits in a classroom is not a great option, and I'm doing my best to give them more than they had before (or would have had if they'd stayed at the shelter). I'd love to have them adopted by families during the school year instead, but that's not the situation I inherited and the teachers and students love love love those bunnies!!! (When I went to pick them up, the students were traumatized because I used the boxes we got at the shelter to transport them (the shelter name was emblazed across the boxes) and the kids thought I was taking the bunnies back to the shelter!) I bought exercise pens so that this summer the rabbits have lots of space in our camp classrooms to play with their new toys and zoom and binky (which they do) and they're safe from harm. They're never caged at all during our camp time and their hutches are used as a home base only. I've cleaned them to the best of my ability, but they need to be replaced.
Also, I'm continuing to work with the teachers and will give them the exercise pens for the school year in hopes that the administration will count that as "caged" so that they never have to be stuck in their hutches at night or over the weekend.
I am wondering what the best hutch situation would be for a single Dwarf Dutch bun that lives in a classroom and is allowed free-roam of the class during the day. Also, what about a bonded pair of Dwarf Dutches in the classroom next door? I'm looking for the hutch to be a home-base and litter area, but they're confined to the hutches at night and on weekends. What they have now is not working (both size and style) and I would like to make it easy on the teachers to have in their room, clean, etc. Links to various options would be extremely helpful!
BACK-STORY:
I was introduced to bunnies as pets when I adopted a dwarf bun from my job last summer. I run a summer camp program called Tiny Farm Camp which has a small farm space (large gardens really) and houses several animals for the summer months. On the farm we have chickens, dwarf goats and miniature horses. Last year they adopted 4 dwarf bunnies from a local shelter, bought hutches, and used those rabbits for the rabbits class. When I took over the program mid-summer they were transporting the bunnies daily from an air-conditioned classroom/office where they lived in their hutches to the farm where the class took place in the shade and the morning, back to the classroom and their hutch. The camp director let the buns out of their hutches for 1-2 hours a day, but they often didn't even leave the hutch. They had a bonded pair of sisters and a pair of brothers that un-bonded after neutering, so they kept them separate. One of the single males didn't do well at all with the kids, so I brought him home at the end of the program and adopted him. The others were put into classrooms (K-2) for the school year.
After having the "antisocial" bunny (Pepe) for about 2 months, he changed completely and became a part of our family. I did a ton of research on house rabbits, gave him free roam of the house (although he never left my son's room) and he bloomed into a loving little dude.
This year I ran the farm program from day 1 and have been working with the classroom teachers as far as diet (they were feeding mainly pellets and a little hay) and exercise. Both classroom teachers were open to the idea of free-ranging in their room, and the bunnies took to it well. However, when I picked up the bunnies this year, it was desperately clear that they were not cleaning the hutches enough. They were damaged from rabbit pee in the corners which should have been avoidable had they been spot cleaning daily. The hutch for the bonded pair was also too small for the sisters. The rabbits (by order of the administration) had to be caged when the teacher left for the day or if there was a substitute.
I know that putting rabbits in a classroom is not a great option, and I'm doing my best to give them more than they had before (or would have had if they'd stayed at the shelter). I'd love to have them adopted by families during the school year instead, but that's not the situation I inherited and the teachers and students love love love those bunnies!!! (When I went to pick them up, the students were traumatized because I used the boxes we got at the shelter to transport them (the shelter name was emblazed across the boxes) and the kids thought I was taking the bunnies back to the shelter!) I bought exercise pens so that this summer the rabbits have lots of space in our camp classrooms to play with their new toys and zoom and binky (which they do) and they're safe from harm. They're never caged at all during our camp time and their hutches are used as a home base only. I've cleaned them to the best of my ability, but they need to be replaced.
Also, I'm continuing to work with the teachers and will give them the exercise pens for the school year in hopes that the administration will count that as "caged" so that they never have to be stuck in their hutches at night or over the weekend.