You should not breed cross breed rabbits unless you have known homes for them. Cross breed rabbits are very hard to get rid of and usually wind up being eaten. A netherland dwarf doe is too small to breed to an angora buck. You are putting your doe in danger during the kindleing process. The babies heads MAY be too big for the doe to give birth to them and she may die trying. If your mix was the other way around - Angora doe, netherland buck- you would be OK. Why not find someone with a nice Netherland buck who will let you breed it to your doe for pick of the litter?? Don't risk your bunny just because you want babies.
The French breed.
An angora can be a breed of rabbit (from which you get angora fibre) or a type of goat (from which you get mohair).
The English Angora rabbit has tassles on it's ears.
yes, it will just result in a mixed breed of course
There is no official Netherland lop rabbit. There are Netherland Dwarves and lop breeds including Mini Lop, Holland Lop, and more. A Netherland lop rabbit would be a mixed breed. Additionally, in rabbits, all that the breed guarantees is a certain look and not a certain personality. As for general differences between female and male rabbits, female rabbits generally develop a dewlap. And of course, female rabbits do not have penises and testicles, but without flipping a rabbit over to inspect in detail, the casual viewer cannot tell. For details about how to tell if a rabbit is male or female, see the related question below.
This has so many breeds one is the angora
Angora is the one that stands out, because the others are popular dog breeds, and Angora is a popular cat breed (and rabbit breed and goat breed) rather than dog.
aidan robson lol:)<3
There are no wild Netherland Dwarfs: they're an exclusively domesticated breed of rabbit.
Any rabbit! But the most popular rabbit breeds are Holland Lop, Jersey Wooly, and/or Netherland Dwarf Rabbit!
The smallest breed of rabbit are Netherland dwarfs but they are not rare
I think you probably mean "Angora". Angora is a breed of goat which originated in what is now Turkey. The fleece from an Angora goat is called mohair. (There is also an Angora rabbit from whom Angora Fibers or Wool can be harvested.)