Yes, provided it is safe from predators, has a proper cage, and doesn't get too hot. It is safer to keep a rabbit inside the house, but make sure you bunny-proof your house, for you, your house, and your bunny!
Yes, bunny can live in a cage outdoors, but it is not recommended. They are easily frightened by predators (dogs, cats...) that roam freely outside and are more often forgotten by their owners ( far from the eyes, far from the heart..). They are also at a danger of getting heat-stroke in high summer and/or freezing in winter if you live in a northern country. The lifepan of an outdoor bunny is about 3-4 years shorter than indoor rabbits. If you have no other choice, make sure he has a box in which he can hide and burrow in bad weather (you can fill it with hay for extra insulation) or if menaced by something, and take a great care in getting him food and water , especially in winter when it gets cold (congealed water = thirsty bunny!)
First answer: Yes. Before they were domesticated they lived outdoors.
Response: That's very faulty logic! Rabbits have been domesticated for almost a thousand years, and in that time they've been transported all over the world, and they've become dependent on humans.
First of all, when they were wild, rabbits lived in the western Mediterranean region. It never gets too hot or too cold there. Pet rabbits are a completely different species than the wild rabbits in North America. Pet rabbits can freeze to death in the winter, and die of heat in the summer, even when the wild rabbits in that area survive just fine.
Second of all, wild animals have strong instincts that keep them alive. Pet rabbits haven't needed those instincts since they were domesticated, so they've lost a lot of them, and you can't expect them to know how to take care of themselves. Pet rabbits also don't have the benefit of education: wild animals learn from their mothers, and this helps them know what to do once they're on their own.
How would a pet rabbit find food, or know which foods are healthy and which are poisonous? How would they know where to hide from predators? They don't know these things.
If you don't want your pet rabbit anymore, you have to find a new home for it. Look around for local rabbit rescue groups or animal shelters. You can't just let the rabbit go outdoors: it won't know how to survive, and it will probably live a short, terrified, miserable life.
If you want to keep your rabbit outside, you have to consider all the possible dangers, and make sure your rabbit is protected. Here are some of the dangers:
See the related questions below for more details and helpful links.
yes you can but in the winter time you need to make sure it has plenty of hay or straw to snuggle in.. if it is really cold outside you would probably need to move it.. but only in extreme measures.. and its water might freeze so make sure you check it.
im guessing that means go outside instead ov got outside? if so yes they can as i have had two indoor dwarf bunnies and they live outside, nd they love it.
It is entirely possible for your bunny to burrow under her cage. The best ways around this are 1. Use a cage and Run with a bottom to it that the rabbit cannot get through 2. Bury chicken wire below the ground to the level of about 2 feet so that even if the bunny does dig down they cannot get beyond the bounds of their enclosure. Even better yet, bring your bunny inside and have them at the centre of your family ;)
A grown bunny will usually cost 5$-$40 from a pet store. The cage will cost a lot though!
You should not keep the cage outside anyway. I suggest getting a new cage and keeping it inside. It may be cold for your guinea pig outside. If you didn't keep the cage outside earwigs would not have got to it.
Because of strong muscles in their back legs.
make sure you feed your bunny dry pellet food. Feed it veggies once in awhile therefore it can give them diarrhea. Make sure you let it outside of it's cage for exercise. A bunny without alot of energy can get very bored and stressed out. Make sure you keep them away from any potential danger such as any cords, electrical outlets... because it can chew the cords and/or get shocked. Keep away from any potentially dangerous animals such as dogs...If you have any questions, type "bunny care tips" on google, yahoo...
No it is possible for a lizard and a bunny to stay in the same cage. The lizard could attack the bunny or the other way around.
feed it out of its cage
Yes. Pet Bunnies can live outside as long as you keep them in a cage with food and water.
use a hutch not a cage
It is entirely possible for your bunny to burrow under her cage. The best ways around this are 1. Use a cage and Run with a bottom to it that the rabbit cannot get through 2. Bury chicken wire below the ground to the level of about 2 feet so that even if the bunny does dig down they cannot get beyond the bounds of their enclosure. Even better yet, bring your bunny inside and have them at the centre of your family ;)
in a cage... or bunny hutch you can find them at your local pet stores...
The bunny will be scared to death, but it won’t be eaten by the lizard.
They can and do. You will have to housebreak them and bunny proof your house and also provide a cage where they can be put for some safe down time.
no Bunny's are really cute animals, and also i put a hamster in a cage with a bunny,and the bunny just stared at the hamster and fainted
£25,000,000 for a Vietnemesse bunny. The food will cost about £35 a sack and don't forget to decorate the cage, in Paris they have interior cage designers, their all the rage at the moment :)
I believe it is a stuffed bunny. Definitive a stuffed bunny.
Food, Water, Cage, Love.