Woke up at 7.4 with a pretty straight line through the night. Not something to really complain about, but still, I wish diabetes would give me a call when it wants a bit more insulin instead of leaving me guessing.
All history now so who cares. And I'm going to pick up another rabbit this afternoon
She's the mother of Owie and Suus, the 2 little males I picked up a couple of weeks ago. She's very unhappy being an indoor rabbit with a cage and 2 small children in the household. Her current owner got her when friends emigrated, and she was used to a big garden and no petting.
So my friend decided it would be much better for her and for her children if I adopt the mother and they keep 2 of the babies. Fine with me, big garden and no unwanted petting suits me just fine. It's exactly what I ask for at the guinea-pig shelter when I get guinea-pigs: I'm happy with the ones that don't like human interaction, leaving the cuddly guinea-pigs for others
Only problem is, being female, she can't join her sons and the guinea-pigs, so she'll have to live with my 2 ****** female rabbits and the chickens.
Any tips for letting them get used to eachother without seriously hurting eachother? Tips that don't require a lot of handling, as they are hard (if not impossible) to catch?