NO
unless you are taking very, very good care of the kits
The female does not abandon her kits. The kits decide when they are ready to leave and may stay through the second year to help care for their new siblings.
Female. How else would she have had 3 kits?
No, it's impossible. A she-cat is not ready to have kits until she is around a year old.
Disaster preparedness kits, sometimes called emergency kits, can be purchased ready made online from evaq8, the Red Cross Store, Amazon or eBay. Alternatively, the government site "ready" has suggestions and instructions for making up kits at home.
that will always be the female that is pregnant with her kits
The young of a vixen (Female fox) are called Kits.
He wasn't ready for kits and thinks it is all a misunderstanding.
Bunnies mate by the male mounting the female and mating. The female bunny can have multiple litters of baby bunnies, called kits, throughout the year. The gestation period for a bunny is about 30 days, and a litter can range from 1 to 14 kits. The female bunny will nurse and care for her kits until they are old enough to be independent.
The Ready Store offers 72-hour emergency kits for a cheaper deal than average. The store can be found at http://www.thereadystore.com/survival-kits/72-hour-kits.
Yes, in the latest series, they have four kits, but only two survive. Their kits are- Sparkkit, Alderkit, Juniperkit, and Dandelionkit. Juniperkit, a a male, and Dandelionkit, a female, dies. Sparkkit, a female, and Alderkit, a male, survive. In the latest book, both become apprentices.
A skunk's gestation period typically lasts about 60 to 75 days. After this time, a female skunk usually gives birth to a litter of 2 to 10 kits. The kits are born blind and helpless, relying on their mother for care and nourishment until they are ready to emerge from the den at around 8 to 10 weeks of age.
Kits need to drink milk from the mother rabbit for about 6-8 weeks. I know its long, but the female only suckles her kits for about 5 minutes a day, that's it!