Quote: During cooler weather, I often put does that are soon to kindle in large carriers and put them in my hall closet - I call it "the maternity ward." Though a lot of first-time does may not use the provided nest box, most of my does do exactly what they are supposed to do; the babies get cleaned up and fed, and a nice nest with lots of pulled fur gets built somewhere in the carrier. If necessary, I put the kits and as much nest material as I can in the box, and most of my does are fine with that. Once the babies are born, the doe goes back out to her cage, and I put the nest box and kits in with her once or twice per day. I put the nest box in her cage, and get on with my other chores, but I keep an eye on the box. If the doe doesn't get into the box within a few minutes of my putting in her cage, I put the nest box in a carrier that is barely larger than the nest box, put the doe in the box, and close the lid of the carrier. I have had only a couple of does try to "hide" from their kits at one end of the box; most are quite content to settle down and nurse the kits. I have only had to repeat this process a few times with any doe; most figure the whole process out very quickly. Once the does get the hang of it, I can carry the babies out to them, they jump right into the boxes, and by the time I get through with feeding, the does are done and the babies come back in the house.
When I first started with rabbits, I never would have believed that this much interference would be tolerated by rabbit mothers. Over the years, I have only had one doe that I know deliberately savaged her litter, and she did it more than once and without any interference or provocation from me. I have only had a couple of does reject their litters; of those, one apparently hadn't any milk anyway. Like everyone else, I had heard people saying that does would reject or eat their litters if you touched them, and that may be true of rabbits that are barely handled by their owners. But a lot of the animals I raise are sold as pets, so I am selecting for people-friendly rabbits. I suspect that the more laid-back, outgoing personalities may make them more positive about human interaction as a whole; at any rate, this has worked for me.