Well. Long story.
When I grow up every third house had either chickens or rabbits for meat, so did my grandparents and my parents (although only for a short time). It was what got on the table Sundays. Affordable meat.
That's what I remembered when I had some psychological problems, I reckoned I needed something living to care for around me to keep going, I'm still not confident enough top get a dog. So it was rabbits, after "harvesting"(=poaching) some wild ones I decided it was worth a try.
Went to a market, got a doe (Fury) and a buck, but they were too young to produce that year, so I got another already pregnant Checkered Giant doe. 12 lively kits, everything just looked fine. Went to the US to visit my sister, came back to sick rabbits. Didn't know what it was at that time, but as soon as I found out it was Myxo I tried to quarantine the survivers from each other, but only Fury, housed in my kitchen, survived. It was autum by then, she didn't have a chance to grow winter fur, so I had to keep her in through winter. In spring I bought another "doe", was happy how well they got along, guess what, and soon after Fury had her first litter in my kitchen.
By then, Fury almost had succeded in killing me twice, pretty much wrecked the appartment, and put the neighbours cat and dog into their place.
Then I bought my own house, and since I learned a lot about rabbits I let them free roam during daytime. My buck died of shock due to an fox attack (wasn't hurt, I was close and scared the fox off, caught it some time later), and the next buck ventured into my house frequently and behaved perfect, so Herr Hase became my house bunny. He looked lonely at times, so I kept one of his daughters, Dotty, as his cuddlebun. They are free roam, only have to stay inside the house in the night.
Unfortunatly, Herr Hase now has Athrosis in his hip, quite likely due to injury from a fall (***** climbed everywhere). *sigh* . Lots of pee "accidents" (doesn't smell nice here), and I have to bath his rear frequently, give medication twice per day, but well, that's part of what I took responibility of. Need to call a neighbour this weekend to help trim his nails and fur.
I'm still breeding rabbits for meat, with two active does, Chantal and Ruth, one litter each per year. If they don't outsmart me, last year they managed to have 6 litters. Fury, 9yo , my first rabbit and my favorite, with a mindset that would suit a huge Rottweiler, and her daughter Red (7yo), are retired and live a happy outdoor life, digging a lot. Red accidentially got pregnant this spring, not able to deliver and had an emergency spay this spring. I can't praise my vet enough, first for even picking up the phone on a weekend and second for performing the surgery even with very bad odds. He didn't think she would survive, but my rabbits are tough, fit, healthy critters.
I treat my rabbits more like goats, having them graze outside on the meadow, no fence, and training them to return to their hutch on command. I haven't yet met anyone who keeps rabbits the way I do, but I guess I'm not average. Pretty much a hermit, apart from work, and with a lot of confidence about the abilities of others, rabbits, humans, I'm quite optimistic most times. And rabbits proved to be capable of much more than most would think.