Available Here: Rabbit Care

Can Rabbits Be Litter Trained? | Pet Rabbits

Dislike 0 Published on 26 Nov 2013

Full Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLLALQuK1NDrjnjAFAcbvUg4tmT_jxnjTU
_
_
Pet Rabbit Essentials
Timothy Hay: http://amzn.to/1cJZZeF
Comb to control shedding : http://amzn.to/1KBKfog
Clear Plastic Tubing - To protect the rabbit and the cords: http://amzn.to/1bKNcak
BOOK on Rabbit Care: http://amzn.to/1HdbO9S
Bunny Harness: http://amzn.to/1K6yOYQ
Rabbit Food: http://amzn.to/1FgqiWg

Check out Cool Pet Rabbit Toys
Beachcomber hat: http://amzn.to/1KBIvvl
Mini Plastic Slinky: http://amzn.to/1cJZZeF
Toy Plastic Keys: http://amzn.to/1ExHLTv
Bunny Maze Haven: http://amzn.to/1F7PJpy
Sunmaid Raisins : http://amzn.to/1E2wry1
Papaya Tablets: http://amzn.to/1F9vp8G
Deluxe Rabbit Home: http://amzn.to/1F9vp8G
Woven Grass Mat for Rabbits: http://amzn.to/1A0rhHQ
Bunny Chew Toy: http://amzn.to/1K6ySrO
Roomba - To keep your home clean: http://amzn.to/1Fgoa0L

Watch more How to Take Care of a Pet Rabbit videos: http://bit.ly/1EhPnsK



Amy: Mary, can my rabbit be litter box trained?

Mary: It's probably too late. Your rabbit is 12 years old. Can rabbits be litter box trained? Yes. You don't even have to train them. They're immaculately clean animals by nature, and all you really have to do is help them find the litter box.

With cats, for example, you can fill the box with appropriate litter material and put the litter box down and the cat will find it. With rabbits it's a little bit different. Rabbits have their own preferred corners for eliminating. And you have to find where the rabbit would enjoy eliminating and put the litter box there. The best way to attract a rabbit into a litter box is to have litter material on hand that rabbits love, such as, will you do the honors?

Amy: Hay. I mix hay. I use different hays because I spoil my rabbit. Sometimes I top a little of that hay on top, which I know, you don't want to use just all oat hay or alfalfa hay, but I add a little bit of treat hay sometimes.

Mary: Now watch what's going to happen here. It's exactly what we want. If you fill a litter box with hay. We have a layer or two of newspaper on the bottom to line it, then we fill it up with hay, the rabbit will be attracted because the hay smells fresh and wonderful and the rabbit will sit in the litter box and pee and poop just the same way as a rabbit that's wild will sit in your backyard and pee and poop, and you won't have any litter box issues.

The big problem with rabbits and litter boxes, is usually that people give the rabbit too much freedom too soon in the home, and what you really should do, when you're working with a new rabbit, is keep the rabbit in a pen or in a very generous size cage, with that litter box in one corner until the litter habits are really well established. Once you see the rabbit going regularly to pee and poop in the litter box, then you can open the cage and allow a little bit of territory. Maybe you want to add a few more litter boxes in corners of your house.

But you don't want to give the rabbit a lot of freedom immediately because you will never be able to keep up, and once the rabbit urine marks different areas in your home, it's very hard to keep them from going back to the same area.

Amy: And also they like to be under things so, like now, I have an awning, I had somebody make an awning for my rabbits, so the box is underneath something. So, underneath a table, or you can make a little house out of a cardboard box. They kind of like that kind of thing.

Mary: And there's one other thing to know about litter box training too, and a lot of people ask this question. They say, "Well, my rabbit is urinating in the litter box perfectly, but I still find poops around the house. What's up with that?" And the thing about it is, rabbit poops are not just excretion, they're also territory markers. So you can expect that to happen, whether a rabbit litter box trained or not, you can expect a few stray poops left around.

Amy: They're like peppercorns.

Mary: They are. Like large peppercorns. Don't serve them to your guests on salads. But they are going to be around your house. Most people don't mind because they're dry and they're virtually odorless. You can pick them up and throw them out, but don't forget to wash your hands.

Amy: But wash your hands. That's what I was going to say.

Mary: So, yes, they can be litter trained.

Amy: It's easy. They train you where to put the box and then they use it. That's the bottom line. Easy.