Rabbit cages should have a water bottle, food bowl, hay rack, bedding, chew toys, and preferably a litter box.
Make sure the water bottle has abundant fresh water and make sure there is an unlimited amount of hay for the rabbit.
You can find quality inexpensive cages for your rabbit at PetProductsByRoyal.com
Rabbit cages are often available at your local pet shop or at your local supermarket. You can also buy rabbit cages online and get them delivered to your door.
babies dont live in cages.!! and yes mongoose eat baby rabbit's
http://www.cavycages.com provides information on SAFE inexpensive home-made cages that owners can make.
Yes, they can if your rabbit pees and poops alot. lol
In the wild, they use burrows, as a pet, enclosed areas/cages.
A rabbit's home is known as a burrow or rabbit hole. A group of burrows is called a warren. Domestic rabbits generally live in cages or hutches.
It is not recommended to use cages for animals other than they were intended for as then can endanger your pet. PetProductsByRoyal.com has some great cages for small animals. ^Isn't 100% true. The bar spacing in a rabbit cage is to wide for a rat. they can escape. Bar spacing needs to be similar to a hamster cage but size needs to be much larger.
A rabbit cage is a large contained habitat for a pet rabbit, for example: dog/pet crates, "condos" (multi-level cages; homemade versions can be made from wire grid squares, like NICs), exercise pens, hutches, etc.Many "rabbit cages" sold in stores are not actually good for rabbits:Many are too small, especially for non-dwarf breeds (medium-size and large rabbits). Rabbit cages must be big enough to contain all the necessary supplies, and allow the rabbit to stretch and hop around. See the related question below about rabbit cages for details.Wire-grid flooring should be avoided because it's uncomfortable for the rabbit and can lead to sore hocks (infected heels -- this can become a serious illness).Solid walls (plexiglass) should be avoided because they prevent air flow and encourage filthiness.Some people choose to skip the cage entirely and keep the rabbit in a 100% bunny-proofed room instead, or use baby gates to section-off parts of the home. How "free range" your rabbit can be will depend on the details of your home -- the most important thing is to keep the rabbit healthy and safe.Rabbits need time outside their cage every day, 3-4 hours of socializing, playing, and exercising. If the cage is on the small side, the rabbit needs even more time outside of it, like 6 hours. Every area the bunny has access to should be bunny-proofed.See the related questions below for more info and helpful links!
A good quality care of adequate size will run $200.00 to $300.00. This will generally include feed dishes, perches, seed skirt, removable pan and grate (for ease of cleaning). A cage of this quality will last many, many years if properly cared for.
Look up NIC cages. They're huge with lots of room for bunny and my three story cages only cost about 80 bucks each in materials.
Large rabbit cages work, which can be found at almost any pet store. Some people also build their own c&c cages.