Sentences with phrase «rabbit out of trouble»

It's always best to do some bunny proofing as well and provide lots of alternative chewing toys alongside areas that may be chewed to keep your rabbit out of trouble.
Toys your bunny can play in such as tunnels, wicker toys, and card board boxes are also great for keeping your rabbit out of trouble.
Making a digging box can be an excellent alternative and grass mats that can be purchased from pet stores are good for keeping your rabbit out of trouble.
Toys not only aid in keeping your rabbit out of trouble, they also provide mental stimulation and exercise.
Always provide lots of attractive and acceptable alternatives such as a digging box to keep your rabbit out of trouble.

Not exact matches

But a first read of the new draft (and, notably, it's still being called a «draft») and a number of skeptical lawmaker statements suggests this is one legislative rabbit that political wizard Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell could have trouble pulling out of his hat.
From gardening with my Pepé, making gnocchi with Memé, naming «pet» rabbits who would later be ragout to making homemade cinnamon lollipops to sell out of my locker in grade 7 (got in trouble for that one).
The trouble is that his adventures rely on rabbit - out - of - the - hat revelations which retroactively render the rest of what you've just watched inconsequential.
Always providing alternatives such as tunnel toys and shelters as this may satisfy your rabbit and be enough of a distraction to keep them out of trouble.
If you rabbit appears to be eating the wood of its enclosure then make sure you supplying plenty of hay as an alternative as well as wicker or willow toys from a pet store or cardboard things they can chew on that will satisfy this need and keep them out of trouble.
As long as you know where your rabbit is — and it is staying out of trouble (e.g. not chewing on the furniture or marking its territory via urine and droppings)-- let it enjoy a little snooze under its favorite chair while you sit and watch TV or read the paper.
Signs of early trouble will vary with each rabbit, but you should seek veterinary help when any of the following occur: Loss of litterbox habits, straining to urinate, hopping in and out of the litter pan, wetness around the genital area or chronic skin irritation in that area from urine scalding, semi-solid (like toothpaste) urine, or blood in the urine.
If you find your rabbit digging at your carpet or flooring, soft furnishings or wallpaper then its time to find some acceptable alternatives to keep them busy and out of trouble.
Rabbits love playing in cardboard boxes which can keep them occupied and out of trouble endlessly.
This makes sense, as cats in the wild will hunt rabbits and large rodents and have no trouble making a meal out of a pretty big whole animal.
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