Thank you for replying... While I clearly can't rule out that hypothesis, I am certain this animal belongs to someone. He is quite large. He also doesn't run away from people, cars, or the lawn mower. Not to be confused with not wanting to be caught....@TJAnonymous
I just did some research, because you got me curious about the eye colors of rabbits. According to my research, wild rabbits CANNOT have blue eyes, as that gene is only found in domestic rabbits. However, I have a hypothesis of why it looks like a wild rabbit with blue eyes.
It’s possible it’s a mix between a wild cottontail and a domestic rabbit. That would explain the behavior and the eye color as well as the wild rabbit look.
Even then, blue eye color I think is a recessive gene. This is only a hypothesis.
You may have a truly rare and unique rabbit there!
Looks are not everything. Below is a picture of my bunny, Hazel. He was also a stray bunny. People in the area originally assumed he was a wild rabbit because he's brown like the wild rabbits in this area. But he is also large and very tame. When he got hungry enough, he willingly came to people and that's how he was captured. We took him in afterwards. It could easily be the same with this new stray.