sootybunny
Member
Anyone who has experience of them? What are they like? Share opinions of them please?
Unless you intend to show them, there really is no benefit to getting a purebred rabbit, and if anything, like sablesteel said, purebreds suffer more health issues. (Especially nethies, as that cute flat brachycephalic face causes teeth and middle ear problems). I also don’t believe that certain breeds have certain personalities - the same as with dogs, it is individual personality and upbringing and experience that makes a rabbits personality.
Hello
I used to breed netherlands. They have a reputation for being aggressive but mine were friendly enough; the males were high strung but sociable; the females, while they could care less for people, didn't bite. The temperament varies a lot from line to line too; especially since so many of the lines are pet quality/backyard breeder-esque stock. Show quality dwarfs get expensive because they are hard to breed for show; they have small litters, take some time to mature, and even then you often get more of the litter being unshowable than not. Because they can have a lot of health issues (especially malocclusion and hooked spine) I would try to find a responsible breeder (probably a show breeder, selling some of the not show quality kits they produce as pets) to buy from instead of just settling for any dwarf. When you are buying them make sure to check the teeth for the correct bite.
I own a Netherland Dwarf. He’s quite friendly and loveable once he is warmed up to being around someone. Everyone that has ever been around him has loved him & I love having him. Mine personally is super sweet and cuddle. He’s quirky and he likes to dig. But the female that had been around him all his life was the complete opposite. It really all just depends on your rabbit
I was just saying I think all rabbits are individuals despite breeds, and can’t really compare breeds for their personalities, in my opinion. Does sound like your baby is very relaxed and happy with you thoughI was asking about their personality and what they are like that’s all.
I was just saying I think all rabbits are individuals despite breeds, and can’t really compare breeds for their personalities, in my opinion. Does sound like your baby is very relaxed and happy with you though
I want to hear that story about her name hahaI agree with Popsicles - I currently have 29 rabbits (way too many - that's what I get for rescuing strays from the park and finding out later they are pregnant). I had three rabbits - Tigger mixed or American breed super sweet after nurtured. Much like a cat - he would run around the house - jump up when he wanted love, lay on the couch just out of reach when he didn't etc. Binks - supposedly he was a dwarf female - NOPE - bad stree breeders! He was super sick when I got him - Rat Bite Fever - should have died but he was a fighter so I was his fighter. He was on injects for the first 8 months of his life, eating from a syringe and drinking from a syringe, did I mention he was TOO YOUNG TO BE AWAY FROM MOM TO BOOT! Fries my nerves...vet thinks he might be flemish but due to the sickness he has missing bones and arthirtis (shot of pain meds once a week and oral as needed) and he is the sweetest thing you could EVER imagine. He loves to give kisses, snuggle, loves when I wear a dress - he loves to get under there and claim my legs...silly boy! But he was obsessed with me so I decided to get him a girl friend (Tigger and Binks didn't get a long). So comes Mrs. Bon-Bons (who by the way named herself - long story maybe another time). She was mean, frightened, aggressive, with us humans....LOVED Binks. September 23, 2017, we find "Ink Spot" and Binks falls in love and she is alright with him...we bring her home and within 5 days they are housed together, but she hates us, fears us, she was in bad shape. I took her to my vet for a check up and found out she was severly obese, her toes had been broken from the long nails that the person
I raise netherland dwarf bunnies, along with a few other breeds.
As people are saying, they are normally non-agressive, often evasive. My favorite Netherland Dwarf is a Blue-Eyed-White we named Storm. She comes to the front of her cage and waits for us to pet her, or give her any kind of attention, and will sit with us for hours in the grass, or ride around on a shoulder if we're doing work. We also have a Netherland dwarf we named Boxer because she would box every time you reached into the cage. She even bit a few times.
Like most rabbits, in general, Nethies can range from one extreme to another. It all depends on their early weeks of life. If they learn that people are their friends, before they are weaned, they are set for awesomeness. If ignored, they will become evasive and even hostile. If abused... they are not even good for breeding.
The only rabbit breed I know that is almost constant in their personality are lops. They are bred for personality, so they are almost ALL sweet, attention-seeking, lovebugs. But, I have had a few lop bunny rescues that were rather unpleasant to deal with... until they had enough attention, then they became friendly but never truly affectionate.
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