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- Newsgroups: rec.pets
- Path: sparky!uunet!hobbes!megm
- From: megm@sco.COM (Meg McRoberts)
- Subject: Re: Rabbit worry
- Organization: The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 08:04:40 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.080440.20917@sco.com>
- References: <BxvnDr.Ho4@world.std.com> <22496@drutx.ATT.COM> <Bxz0HH.3DG@world.std.com>
- Sender: news@sco.com (News admin)
- Lines: 54
-
-
- In article <Bxz0HH.3DG@world.std.com> marty@world.std.com (Marty M HaleEvans) writes:
- ==>
- ==> This may be what he's doing; I'm a little relieved that this may change as
- ==> he gets older -- there's fuzz everywhere!
-
- yes, Rasta has different types of shedding. sometimes i can
- brush several brushfuls of hair out, and other times no amount
- of brushing gets anything, but if i pet her there is a cloud
- of hair everywhere. i find i can help control this situation
- a little bit by spraying some Avon skin-so-soft on my hands
- and then petting her. my dog is extremely allergic to the rabbit
- (and they are friends) so i do all i can to minimize the hair
- being spread around.
-
- if the rabbit gets any bald spots or has flakes on its skin
- (or the roots of the shed hair) it may have mites or fungus
- on its skin. that needs a vet's attention. when this happened
- to rasta, my vet treated it with shots of ivermeticin 10-14
- days apart and it cleared right up, although i hear that some
- vets don't like using ivermeticin this way.
-
- an alternative to petromalt is Vetasyl, a feline laxative
- that works more on the principle of Metamucil. my vet says
- Vetasyl has been lab-tested for rabbits and is safe and
- effective, and it is her first choice because it doesn't
- delete as much nutrition. perhaps most important is to
- realize that no matter what you do, your rabbit might get
- a hairball sometime, so know the signs (small, erose pellets,
- decline in appetite) and seek treatment fast.
- ==>
- ==> I don't keep him in a cage; he has free run except for a few rooms. I do
- ==> occasionally try to pick him up briefly, in hopes that he'll get more
- ==> used to being handled.
-
- Rasta was a fairly nice 1-1/2 year old rabbit when we got her,
- then a month later the hormones clicked in and it was a month
- before we realized what the problem was and got her roto-rootered.
- by this point, we she had become pretty antisocial -- didn't even
- want to be petted. the approach we took was to never let her
- have ANY treats unless she took them from our hands. pellets
- and hay were always available, but if she wanted anything else,
- she had to get it out of our hands. she was so bad that some
- days she would go without any treats. but eventually greed
- won out. she is now so socialized that she'll lie in my arms
- and almost fall asleep. she greets visitors at the door, begs
- at the table when we have guests, and right now is asleep on
- my feet under the desk. so they can be brought around.
-
- oh yes, when you're lying on the floor with your rabbit, if
- he comes up by your face, rub noses -- that seems to be a
- very rabbit-friendly gesture.
-
- meg mcroberts
-