How rabbits interact with other pets depends entirely on the personality of the pets involved.
Always monitor your rabbit around other pets, and interven if a fight breaks out. Never let animals fight. A small cut on your rabbit, invisible to human eyes, can bloom into an abscess (costing you much money to heal, and the rabbit much pain).
Rabbits have often been known to get along very well with other animals, including guinea pigs, cats, dogs, hamsters, and so on. If your rabbit has found a friend in another pet, great! BUT never leave them alone together unsupervised. Too many friendships have ended with "Spot lost it and killed the rabbit even though they were cuddling together when I left them!" Don't forget that animals are animals: they can snap into their animal instincts any time.
Rabbits can be bonded with other rabbits (in this case, they can be left alone together). Sometimes, bonding is easy; sometimes, it's a drawn-out process: it depends on the individuals.
See the related questions below for more info and helpful links.
One person wrote: they are good just make sure they grow up together like I have a hamster and a rabbit they get along and then my friend has a Dog and rabbit and then I know Cats and rabbits just need to grow up together.
kittens and deer
Rabbits
Go to the owner of the pet then they will play with eachother. I think.
Rabbits can be considered both pets and livestock. Some people keep rabbits as pets for companionship, while others raise them as livestock for food production or fiber (such as Angora rabbits for their wool). The categorization depends on how the rabbits are kept and the purpose for which they are raised.
They are friendly and smaller than some other rabbits so they are easier to hold and handle. They are especially good pets for children.
Some do, some don't. Islam does not forbid the keeping of pets.
Approximately 2% of American households own rabbits as pets. This translates to around 1.5 million pet rabbits in the United States. Rabbits are popular for their friendly nature and relatively low maintenance compared to other pets. Their ownership tends to vary regionally and is often influenced by trends in pet care and adoption.
Yes, they can! It can poison kids too, and of course pets or any other animals.
when we became vegetarians!
No, rabbits are excellent pets all the time.
Zuza Vrbova has written: 'Kittens' -- subject(s): Cats, Kittens 'Parakeets' 'Citizenship' 'Snakes' -- subject(s): Snakes as pets, Snakes 'Rabbits' -- subject(s): Rabbits, Rabbits as pets, Juvenile literature, Pets
Contemporary American pets include dogs, cats, birds, fish, rabbits, and reptiles. Dogs and cats are the most common types of pets in the United States, with millions of households owning at least one of each. Other popular pets like birds, fish, rabbits, and reptiles are also commonly kept as companions.