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Bunny rabbit as 'flock protector' ? - Page 3

post #21 of 28

I have NEVER had any problems with my giant,,and he sometimes doesn't go in at night, Too big for a hawk or owl to carry off with or kill.  

I don't think they actually defend by any means,but they are great to have...and to me,he's their guardian,,Obviously I know a dog or coyote

could kill it, but he;s in a well fenced yard,and has never run into problems.(knock on wood)

You only live once,,but if you work it right, once is enough

~Family of : 6 silkie hens( 1 being a rooster) 5 ducks (1 pekin,1 rouen ,1 swedish black,2 silver call ducks), 2 African pygmy goats,2 dogs, 4 cats, 2 rabbits, 1 crested gecko ,,1 awesome husband and 3 children I would do anything for~~ all of us,animal lovers!~~

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You only live once,,but if you work it right, once is enough

~Family of : 6 silkie hens( 1 being a rooster) 5 ducks (1 pekin,1 rouen ,1 swedish black,2 silver call ducks), 2 African pygmy goats,2 dogs, 4 cats, 2 rabbits, 1 crested gecko ,,1 awesome husband and 3 children I would do anything for~~ all of us,animal lovers!~~

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post #22 of 28
Quote:
Originally Posted by zazouse View Post

I think the chickens would protect the rabbit more than the rabbit protecting the chicken

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybVb3t560oY



This was so funny!goodpost.gif  Thanks.

Have patient Husband for over 35 yrs., 34 yr.old D, 32 yr.old D, 26 yr.old S; Home-schooled - 10 yr.old GD, 8 yr.old GS, 6 yr.old GS and 2 1/2 yr.old GS
55 Bantams, 3 Stand. Speckled Sussex, 3 Cats, 1 Great Pyrenees,  2 Fainting Does, 1 TexMaster wether, Obi Wan Kenobi - Holland Lop, Chewbacca - Holland Lop, Emil - tan hooded rat, Linguine - black hooded rat, rest in peace Remy.

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Have patient Husband for over 35 yrs., 34 yr.old D, 32 yr.old D, 26 yr.old S; Home-schooled - 10 yr.old GD, 8 yr.old GS, 6 yr.old GS and 2 1/2 yr.old GS
55 Bantams, 3 Stand. Speckled Sussex, 3 Cats, 1 Great Pyrenees,  2 Fainting Does, 1 TexMaster wether, Obi Wan Kenobi - Holland Lop, Chewbacca - Holland Lop, Emil - tan hooded rat, Linguine - black hooded rat, rest in peace Remy.

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post #23 of 28
Quote:
Originally Posted by beeliz View Post


I have a flemish giant rabbit who is living with the chickens and ducks,,and she ,no joke,is their guardian! I laughed when I read this because I thought I was the only one that had a guard rabbit.If you get yourself a giant flemish pure breed, it will scare away,or at least make other animals think twice about coming into their area. works for me :))  No joke! I will always have a flemish giant,some are the size of beagles,,

 



Agreed.  We have a small rabbit that roams with the chickens but she wouldn't protect them.  Growing up I had one that attacked the neighbor's cats.  The cats quickly learned to avoid the furry fury.

http://www.voiceofthehive.com - Stories of beekeeping, honeybees and the beekeepers who love them.

http://www.chickendreams.com - In pursuit of the egg

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http://www.voiceofthehive.com - Stories of beekeeping, honeybees and the beekeepers who love them.

http://www.chickendreams.com - In pursuit of the egg

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post #24 of 28


Maybe to a hawk, it doesn't recognize something that big as a rabbit.. Maybe it thinks its a dog. Land predators would probably figure it out faster, but a hawk, maybe that's it..it thinks its a dog. Or at least something like a dog.

Its just too awful hot here for breeds like Flemish in summer. The breeder I got mine from, at the time one one of the most succesful showing and breeding Flemish, kept his in a garage with huge fans and in warm weather, those fiber-type water coolers, like AC, and never showed at outdoor shows during summer. They just can't take this heat like smaller rabbits.
 

Quote:
Originally Posted by beeliz View Post

I have NEVER had any problems with my giant,,and he sometimes doesn't go in at night, Too big for a hawk or owl to carry off with or kill.  

I don't think they actually defend by any means,but they are great to have...and to me,he's their guardian,,Obviously I know a dog or coyote

could kill it, but he;s in a well fenced yard,and has never run into problems.(knock on wood)



 

 

post #25 of 28

Now if somebody could breed a rabbit with Flemish size, and Netherland Dwarf pugnacity and agression, now there you'd have a GAURD rabbit!

post #26 of 28

Here's my guardian :)

IMG_4572.JPG

 

IMG_3960.JPG

 

 

You only live once,,but if you work it right, once is enough

~Family of : 6 silkie hens( 1 being a rooster) 5 ducks (1 pekin,1 rouen ,1 swedish black,2 silver call ducks), 2 African pygmy goats,2 dogs, 4 cats, 2 rabbits, 1 crested gecko ,,1 awesome husband and 3 children I would do anything for~~ all of us,animal lovers!~~

Reply

You only live once,,but if you work it right, once is enough

~Family of : 6 silkie hens( 1 being a rooster) 5 ducks (1 pekin,1 rouen ,1 swedish black,2 silver call ducks), 2 African pygmy goats,2 dogs, 4 cats, 2 rabbits, 1 crested gecko ,,1 awesome husband and 3 children I would do anything for~~ all of us,animal lovers!~~

Reply
post #27 of 28

Time (many, many generations) and selective breeding for size and aggressiveness.  With enough effort you could produce a rabbit like animal that is more aggressive and capable of taking on just about anything.

 

May seem off the wall but my adult game chickens will readily take on a Coopers hawk that is well outside the abilities of a red jungle fowl.  Again, time and selection required, in this case several thousand generations worth although similar results could be realized faster if you now what you are doing and are consistent.

 

Goto following link:http://speculativeevolution.wikia.com/wiki/After_Man:_A_Zoology_of_the_Future

 

see Bardelot

 

May seem silly but evolution has done much extreme in past.

 


Edited by centrarchid - 2/25/12 at 2:40pm
Make every effort to understand your chicken's biology and the environment that supports it.
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Make every effort to understand your chicken's biology and the environment that supports it.
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post #28 of 28


My own experience with rabbits causes me to suspect that long before you got them aggressive and tough enough to take on serious predators, they'd have got so mean and dangerous to the people raising them they'd have done put them all in the stew pt! Lol! Those I had that showed aggression were far worse at going for the person they are used to, that takes care of them, and they feel safe with, than anybody or anything really threatening. A really nasty one can rip your hand with those claws bad as a cat faster than you can get it out of the way!
 

Quote:
Originally Posted by centrarchid View Post

Time (many, many generations) and selective breeding for size and aggressiveness.  With enough effort you could produce a rabbit like animal that is more aggressive and capable of taking on just about anything.

 

May seem off the wall but my adult game chickens will readily take on a Coopers hawk that is well outside the abilities of a red jungle fowl.  Again, time and selection required, in this case several thousand generations worth although similar results could be realized faster if you now what you are doing and are consistent.

 

Goto following link:http://speculativeevolution.wikia.com/wiki/After_Man:_A_Zoology_of_the_Future

 

see Bardelot

 

May seem silly but evolution has done much extreme in past.

 



 

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