Thank you, I rescued a jersey, he was found with a group of jackrabbits where I live in Arizona. He has been an awesome addition to our guinea pig family, but he was a baby and is changing into a true young buck. Understanding his coat has been a challenge. You did a great concise video!
I would buy some ball tip cat grooming scissors- you don't want pointy scissors- and very slowly trim it away over a few days- not all in one go. Here is a good video where someone cuts matts on a angora and she shows how to hold the scissors. th-cam.com/video/CQ2nORb5jlY/w-d-xo.html
Hey, summer is really hot where I'm from and I have a wooly mix, should I cut his hair? If so, how short should I cut it? It's starting to get hot, should I do it now or wait until later? Any piece of advice is welcome, thank you in advance PS: this is my first pet and we've only been together since christmas, I really want to take good care of him
Hi! Thanks for your inquiry! In this video Enim was well into a molt (her head looks a bit odd because she has molted out quite a bit of her "wool cap," which is what we call the fur on the head). The molt is also what is causing the lighter colored "dead" wool, which I recommend plucking so the rabbit does not become matted or injest it. When I was lifting up her wool over her rear, darker wool was evident a few times. That's the new coat growing out. Enim didn't have any matts or webbing, I was simply discussing what could cause them and where they are most often found. But I'm playing with her coat quite a bit in this video and at no point could I see any webbing. I assume what you are seeing is an optical illusion from the loose old coat or the dark growing coat. Hope this assuages your concern over her care!
Thank you, I rescued a jersey, he was found with a group of jackrabbits where I live in Arizona. He has been an awesome addition to our guinea pig family, but he was a baby and is changing into a true young buck. Understanding his coat has been a challenge. You did a great concise video!
yeah agreed I mean damn I had dwarves and this is a whole different matter entirely.
Shes gorgeous!
She’s such a good bunny
*_cute_*
*That’s a little furball*
I have a wooly with a terrible butt mat any tips how to get rid of it? I'm desperate..lol
I would buy some ball tip cat grooming scissors- you don't want pointy scissors- and very slowly trim it away over a few days- not all in one go. Here is a good video where someone cuts matts on a angora and she shows how to hold the scissors. th-cam.com/video/CQ2nORb5jlY/w-d-xo.html
You are so educated on this, super impressive since you sound young :-)
Hey, summer is really hot where I'm from and I have a wooly mix, should I cut his hair? If so, how short should I cut it? It's starting to get hot, should I do it now or wait until later? Any piece of advice is welcome, thank you in advance
PS: this is my first pet and we've only been together since christmas, I really want to take good care of him
I thought they're a no kick bunny..
How do you brush their fur
@@jacobstrickland1682 I thought she was a man
You don’t flip a rabbit upside down.
Not to be mean but for being so well educated on not tangled rabbits why is yours so tangled?
Hi! Thanks for your inquiry! In this video Enim was well into a molt (her head looks a bit odd because she has molted out quite a bit of her "wool cap," which is what we call the fur on the head). The molt is also what is causing the lighter colored "dead" wool, which I recommend plucking so the rabbit does not become matted or injest it. When I was lifting up her wool over her rear, darker wool was evident a few times. That's the new coat growing out. Enim didn't have any matts or webbing, I was simply discussing what could cause them and where they are most often found. But I'm playing with her coat quite a bit in this video and at no point could I see any webbing. I assume what you are seeing is an optical illusion from the loose old coat or the dark growing coat. Hope this assuages your concern over her care!