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- #111
I have gotten calls on both ends, snake people and irrate people warning me to get the rabbits fixed so they don't end up as snake food.
Lol gotta love craigslist.
I don't want to show them
I'm busy making sire they all live happy lives...til we eat them lol
If anyone wants to...be my guest. Want to eat them, they're dang yummy and meaty! Need to feed them to somethin else? They bought then to eat so be it. As long as people aren't collecting then to release into the wild or somethin dumb like that lol its their creature once it leaves my care.
Lol gotta love craigslist.
I don't want to show them

If anyone wants to...be my guest. Want to eat them, they're dang yummy and meaty! Need to feed them to somethin else? They bought then to eat so be it. As long as people aren't collecting then to release into the wild or somethin dumb like that lol its their creature once it leaves my care.
Years ago, I ran an ad in the local paper about some young rabbits I had for sale. I was used to getting a variety of responses, but one message on my answering machine sticks in my mind after all these years. No name, no number, just a woman's voice dripping venom, "Do you realize people feed those things to SNAKES??!"
Then there was a friend of mine who bred commercial rabbits, who sold some young stock to the owner of a small zoo. The understanding was that they would be used to produce rabbits to be fed to some large snakes in the zoo. When the rabbit breeder learned that her rabbits had instead been fed to the snakes, she was livid. She was perfectly fine with people eating her rabbits, but not snakes.
I sell a lot of rabbits as pets, and over the years, I've learned to use the term "commercial breeds" rather than "meat rabbits" because some people really take exception to the idea of eating rabbits. To them, rabbits are "friends, not food"![]()
But as far as showing before breeding, know that doing well in a show room is not at all the same thing as being a good, productive commercial animal. Lots of commercial breeders never take an animal to a show, and lots of show rabbits really don't make it as producers. It's not quite as bad as what some say about Quarter Horses - animals that win in conformation classes aren't good for anything else - but there are certain details where not conforming to the standard actually makes a commercial rabbit better at the job of making meat.![]()