Showing posts with label qld. Show all posts
Showing posts with label qld. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

URGENT LIFE & DEATH PICKUP QUEENSLAND - BABY LEVERETTE

URGENT LIFE & DEATH PICKUP BABY LEVERETTE QUEENSLAND
Mount Coolum, Sunshine Coast
Baby Leveret needs to be collected from rescuer and taken to our Hare Foster Carer in Brisbane. It will die if not given formula very soon. Please text/phone Kim Cooney on 0416 062 947 if you can help. A baby Leverette is a baby Hare. They are not illegal to rescue or rear in Queensland.

Leverette

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

BOO THE LONG EARED GUINEA PIG RESCUED BY THE RABBIT SANCTUARY

READ ABOUT BOO & see video...

Kim Cooney from The Rabbit Rescue Sanctuary rescued BOO the rabbit that his owners claimed was a long eared guinea pig. This did not deter the police who realised he was a giant rabbit.  Rabbits are illegal to keep as pets in Queensland. The Springwood Police seized the rabbit. Kim was alerted to his seizure and rang the police and asked them to surrender him to the Animal Emergency
at Underwood. A kind vet there drove him down to safety to the Rabbit Sanctuary in Grafton NSW. BOO is available for adoption to the right indoor home as a house rabbit. You can apply to adopt him or choose from our other rescue rabbits by using our Application Form on this site.


Read the article in the Guardian Newspaper and see the awesome photo of BOO with the arresting officer.
Click to read article on BOO & see Photo



UPDATE Saturday 6 August
BOO has found his forever home. He was adopted as a pet house rabbit to Chenoa Wilson from

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Harlequin Lop Rabbit for Adoption

We have a beautiful house rabbit coming in on 5th July from Queensland. Not sure on sex yet but we do know that the colour is amazing. He or she has a tiger pattern with a black base and orange stripes! We are going to name him or her TIGGY! (short for tiger!)

Thursday, October 17, 2013

BIG RABBIT RESCUE IN QLD TO RABBIT RESCUE SANCTUARY NSW

QLD RABBIT RESCUE UPDATE!
The little family of mini lops that was being held in custody after seizure from their QLD rescuer are safe! THEY ARE SAVED RESCUED NOT ON DEATH ROW ANYMORE!!!!!! They will make their way down to The Rabbit Sanctuary in Northern NSW soon. A great outcome! Thank you so much to EVERYONE involved.

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

OLDEST RABBIT

This is our oldest resident MARSHMALLOW who is close to 10 years old now.  She is a Netherland Dwarf breed of rabbit. 

She was a QLD magician's rabbit.  She grew too old for the magic act so her owner surrendered her to The Rabbit Rescue Sanctuary.  In Queensland the magicians are allowed up to two rabbits. Because she grew too old for the show the magician wanted to replace her with a younger rabbit which she did by buying one from a pet shop over the QLD border in Tweed Heads. 

We figured that MARSHMALLOW had done enough to service people with all her life spent entertaining children and adults so we provided her a permanent residence status at the Rabbit Sanctuary. 

She spends her days mostly sleeping and lazing about.  Other rabbits show great respect for her as if they know she is old and needs her peace and quiet to live out her days.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

QLD Rabbit Daisy for adoption

Daisy up for adoption to good home. Found in QLD Sunshine Coast & now at the Rabbit Sanctuary in Northern NSW. She is Desexed, vaccinated, microchipped, wormed and healthy with excellent teeth. She is a lilac squirrel colour which is quite bunderfull! She is one year old & 1.87kg

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

What is Rabbit Adoption?

Getting totally confused about the talk of "rabbits for sale" and "rabbits for adoption"?  "What is the difference between rabbits for sale and rabbits for adoption?" you might ask.  In this blog post we will try to explain.

Rabbits for Sale 

If you see a rabbits for sale sign or ad you can be fairly sure that the rabbit that is up for sale is one that was bred for the pet market as a product to sell to the public.  Sometimes a rabbit ends up being for sale when it fails to meet the rabbit breeder's criteria for showing or breeding purposes.  Some rabbit breeders breed for show and others breed purely to supply baby rabbits to the pet market.

Rabbits are for sale in many pet shops or from breeders that show as members of a rabbit club while some are sold by people who are known as 'backyard breeders'.  These are people who keep rabbits to breed baby bunnies to sell to the public or to pet shops.

Many cute baby rabbits are purchased from pet shops on impulse by the public.  Often these babies end up in the animal welfare system when they outgrow their baby cuteness.  Impulse rabbit buyers are often unaware of the needs and behaviours of a fully grown rabbit.   Often they begin to hate their rabbit when it becomes an adolescent full of hormones.  Often their rabbit begins to attack them and they don't know why so they surrender the rabbit to the RSPCA or a private animal shelter.  Unfortunately there are so many rabbits being surrendered to shelters that we get an imbalance in supply and demand and hundreds of beautiful pet rabbits are put to sleep (euthanised) across Australia on an ongoing basis as more are bred and sold than can be re-homed via the rabbit rescue systems currently in place.

By buying a baby rabbit from a breeder rather than adopting one you are missing out on quite a lot.  For example the baby rabbit will not be vaccinated or microchipped and will be quite costly.

(NB You might also like to read our article on "Why Desex My Rabbit?" which explains the benefits for the pet rabbit owner of desexing.)

Rabbits for Adoption

Rabbits are offered for adoption for various reasons.  As mentioned above, sometimes people buy a baby rabbit then tire of him or her or they find that their circumstances change and it becomes difficult or impossible to keep their pet rabbit.

Rabbits for adoption are ones that have either found their way into the RSPCA or a private animal or rabbit rescue shelters or are being privately offered for adoption by owners that feel they cannot keep them any longer.  For example this link leads to a private family trying to adopt baby bunnies that their rabbits gave birth to.

Rabbits in the animal welfare system are at high risk for a number of reasons, one being that due to the ongoing sale of rabbits in pet shops, sale by backyard breeders and the excess sold by registered rabbit club breeders their is a high chance that the rabbit will be put to sleep by lethal injection.  Please be aware that there are different rules at the various drop off points for abandoned rabbits.  All shelters have a limited capacity to take in and hold rabbits until they are found homes.  Often rabbits are abandoned or surrendered to veterinarians.  Some vets try to find the rabbits a home and even desex, vaccinate and microchip the rabbits before they go.  Sometimes the rabbits are put to sleep.

If you are thinking of surrendering your rabbit you should ask the vet or shelter what their policy is regarding whether they will put the rabbit to sleep or keep him or her until a home is found.  You should also consider getting some advice from the Rabbit Rescue Sanctuary about the options available to you.  There are many options and we can assist you if you email, text or call us on 0416 062 947.  See our contact page for more information.

 The Rabbit Sanctuary is a 'no-kill' shelter.  Rabbits that are surrendered are kept until they are adopted to good homes.  Some have been at the Rabbit Sanctuary for years because they have not been chosen by anyone to be their special pet.

If you have read this far you will be beginning to see that adopting a rabbit instead of buying one would help break the cycle.  If you choose to adopt a rabbit instead of buying one you will be saving a life because you make a space for another rabbit to be rescued and offered for adoption.

If you adopt a rabbit from the Rabbit Sanctuary you get lots of added value.  Here is what you get:
Your newly adopted rabbit will be:
Desexed
Vaccinated
Microchipped
Wormed
Mite Free
Vet checked for health
Vet checked for teeth
A Rabbit Care Booklet
A Rabbit House Name Tag by Pet Homes (You can click to get one free for your rabbit along with other free products to try!)
A discount voucher for a RabbitHouse by HoundHouse which we recommend as rabbits love them:)
A big glossy copy of The Pet Directory which contains care articles on rabbits and other pets

An angora and a lop rabbit for adoption

There are many rabbits available for adoption at the Rabbit Sanctuary in NSW

A mini lop available for adoption at the Rabbit Sanctuary.
Rabbits can be delivered to you by pet transport in NSW and VIC.  















Friday, June 8, 2012

Queensland Rabbit Rescue

Update on the big rabbit rescue in Queensland. 

The rabbits are now safe in the hands of the QLD RSPCA and soon on their way to us at the 

Rabbit Rescue Sanctuary in NSW.  We will see you soon little bunnies

These little rabbits will never have to suffer being put near greyhound dogs ever again! 

A first for 

rabbits in Qld


Thank you to the courage of a lovely Qld girl who wishes to remain anonymous who took a big risk and saved them from their terrible circumstances. 


We worked with the 
Qld Govt and RSPCA on this one
 in an historical rabbit rescue. 


Sunday, February 21, 2010

Sounds & Sights in the Rabbit Sanctuary

Morning sounds in the Rabbit Sanctuary the sounds are soft and happy.  You can hear cicadas singing in waves, the rustle of gum leaves above, bird songs, rabbits crunching on grass, corn or hay, the occasional "thump" from a rabbit's back leg swiftly slamming down his objection to something which could quite well be the possum in the nearby tree looking on!  

What you see are bunnies hopping, resting, eating, investigating new toys, looking down a freshly dug (soon to be filled with a rock!) rabbit hole, bunnies drinking from the automatic water bowls or the little pond, bunnies binking with the joy of being with other bunnies and human friends that cuddle and care for them constantly.

These are the sounds and sights in the Rabbit Sanctuary set in the Australian Bush in Northern NSW.  The rabbits that live in the Sanctuary have come from Melbourne, Brisbane, the Gold Coast QLD and Tweed Heads.  Some have also come from the local area of South Grafton on the Clarence River NSW.