OH MY GOD! The cats'll sure have something to worry about though! And small children! And big children! And big adults! And the national guard! Run for your liiiiiives!
ive always wanted a huge rabbit as a pet...and then i think of that corny horror movie with the killer rabbits..
Damn thats a big bunny. I want one too. also it really doesn't matter about cats, i've had many dwarf/netherland rabbits in the past. all it takes is one good kick from the rabbits rear legs, and the cats will be over it. my rabbits and cats played together, after that.
are you serious?? thats why that damned easter bunny didnt make it here! i have never eaten rabbit. I have heard from some people that it is real gamey tasting.
My sister had a bunny for a pet....damn thing chewed up a pair of my figure skates. I think the cats may want to keep their asses to the wall..
eh, the ones we had weren't very gamey at all. Actually, really wasn't my fav dish, but I wouldn't mind trying rabbit again I'd just have to prepare it differently than before
we had a lady lived next to us who rasied rabbits particularly for eating. the our other neighbors raised rabbits for show and for pets. i'm fond of continental giants and jersey wooleys. i'm thinking of have a continental wooley. a GIGANTIC wooly bunny. sounds great. my cats would just shit!
Hunt for real life 'were-rabbit' Sharp-shooters have been brought in to defend allotment patches in Northumberland suffering from a real-life "curse of the were-rabbit". The ravenous giant rabbit, named after the famed Wallace and Gromit character, is reported to have ripped up dozens of prize-winning leeks and turnips. Now growers in Felton, near Morpeth, have drafted in licensed gamekeepers with air rifles to halt the rampage. But animal welfare workers have called for the animal to be trapped instead. Four gardeners described the rabbit as having one ear larger than the other. The main clues are oversized paw prints and sightings of what growers claim to be a cross between a hare and a rabbit. It's been taking huge bites out of cabbages, carrots and turnips... it's a hungry fella Marksman Brian Cadman A small group of allotment holders have now clubbed together to hire two air rifle marksmen with orders to shoot to kill. Grower Jeff Smith, 63, said: "This is no ordinary rabbit. We are dealing with a monster. "It is absolutely massive. I have seen its prints and they are huge, bigger than a deer. It is a brute of a thing." Mr Smith, who has kept an allotment for 25 years, added: "We have two lads here with guns who are trying to shoot it, but it is clever. "They never see it. There were big rabbits in the 1950s and 1960s before pesticides were introduced, but not like this." Marksman Brian Cadman, 17, said: "We've been told to shoot on sight, but we've not had much luck yet. "You can see what it's been eating. "It's been taking huge bites out of cabbages, carrots and turnips. It's a hungry fella." The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) urged the growers to set a humane trap for the animal and release it elsewhere.
My family had a rabbit when I was a tyke. Thing was 12 pounds, which was a bit bigger then their cat. The dog really liked the bunny too. It killed any wild rabbits which wandered in, but it liked the pet. I guess that makes sense.
Who remembers extremely tacky horror movie from the 70's - Night of the Lepus? Huge Killer monster killer rabbits!