Build your own hutch, look at the link I will place below for some help.
Yes, you can use paper towels in a bunny cage as a safe and absorbent bedding option. They can help absorb urine and keep the cage clean. However, it's important to ensure that the paper towels are free from any chemicals or dyes that could be harmful to your bunny. Additionally, consider providing other forms of enrichment and bedding for your rabbit to dig and burrow in.
The starter kit sounds cheaper to buy, because it is sold in one bulk purchase.
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 ;)
No, that is when they are most active. When you put them in their cage when you go to bed, they start their dinner. Keep the food in at night!
The cost of a bunny can vary depending on factors such as breed, age, and where you acquire it from. On average, you can expect to pay between $20 to $50 for a bunny from a shelter or rescue, while purebred or specialty breed bunnies can range from $50 to several hundred dollars. It's important to also consider ongoing costs like food, habitat, and veterinary care.
Try hardware cloth, wood and screws.
feed it out of its cage
It depends on the dog breeds that you have. For instance, if the bunny is bigger than your dogs you will be fine :D Overall, it is ok, but as long as the bunny is in some sort of cage or room not roaming around.
use a hutch not a cage
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.
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.
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
I would highly recommend you give your bun to someone to look after, or take it to a kennel that has rabbit sitting facilities. How are you planning to feed it for all that time, and make sure it has adequate water? Your bun will get very bored and lonely whilst you are away.
£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.