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The subject of intentional breeding or meat rabbits is prohibited. The answers provided on this board are for general guideline purposes only. The information is not intended to diagnose or treat your pet.  It is your responsibility to assess the information being given and seek professional advice/second opinion from your veterinarian and/or qualified behaviorist.

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Forum BONDING Separating bonded pairs

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    • Miap14
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      18 posts Send Private Message

        Hi all, I posted a similar question in another section and didn’t realize there was a “bonding” section.

        I have two 3.5 month old girl babies that I plan on getting spayed when they are a little older. I’ve kept them together up to this point because they are bonded but was recently told I should separate them when they are not supervised due to possible fighting when puberty hits. I have a couple questions:

        1. Can separating them cause them to become depressed? I’m afraid they will stop eating/playing if they are sad.

        2. I keep them in a large playpen right now (almost the size of a whole bedroom). Can caging them to keep them separate cause them to become unbonded?

        3. Does anyone have tips on how to handle this situation?

        4. Will it be possible to re-bond after spaying if they do start to not like each other?

        Any advice is greatly appreciated! I’m having a really though time knowing I will have to cage them in order to keep them apart as they aren’t used to being in a cage.


      • Mikey
        Participant
        3186 posts Send Private Message

          1. It can, but given their ages, it shouldnt. When you separate them (which you should), you will still keep their pens/cages within seeing and smelling distance of one another. As long as they can see and smell one another, their bond shouldnt diminish (as in, they will remain completely or mostly bonded after they are put back together)

          2. Read above You should keep them separated, but close

          3. If you are too worried, keep them in their own cages/pens until they have healed from being spayed and allow them to meet in a common area while you are home. If they start to show any signs of hormones (nipping, grunting, circling, mounting, chasing, ect), stop allowing them to spend any time together. This way they are housed separate while you are away so they cannot fight, and while you are home you can stop any fights that happen. After being spayed and healed, they will also see the common area as a safe, shared territory together making bonding A LOT easier

          4. Depends. If they fight and you are not home to stop it, you will be lucky to find both alive and not bloodied; they likely would not be able to bond after something like that. If they fight, but you are there to stop it fast, they likely will be able to bond after hormones are removed from the situation. If they dont fight and you keep them separated but close, bonding will go pretty smoothly. If you keep them separated and out of sight, they might forget one another, however that would still make bonding most likely possible

          Many people get two small but connectable pens to attach to each buns cage so they still have a lot of room and you can connect the pens later on to make one big pen for them to share


        • Miap14
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          18 posts Send Private Message

            Thank you Mikey! I feel so much better about this! I will certainly try these tips! I appreciate it!!

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        Forum BONDING Separating bonded pairs