Take all rabbits to the vet?

Hi dear rabbit friends,

We were at the vet today, and all three are doing well. One of our males will be neutered next Tuesday, and the other about two weeks later; he thinks he's still too small for anesthesia. The vet had a very good conversation, and he also gave us lots of tips. Tomorrow, the three will be 10 weeks old.

The vet has all 5 reviews and rightly so.

My question is: should I take the other two with me to the neutering appointment?

But wouldn't the two of them have to stay in the carrier the whole time?!

What do you think from experience?

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Jassy1603
3 years ago

Generally, I find it good to bring all the rabbits to the veterinarian. So they can calm each other.

I’d leave the others at the castration. Finally, the rabbit is then in the surgery, after which it is placed in a box, whereby the awakening must be strictly controlled. And as soon as it’s awake, you can take it home right away.

You have to watch at home. If the other rabbits constantly rob him or go to the wound, you should first separate them. The wound healing is first.

In general, however, it would be better if everyone was allowed to move and stay together.

Jassy1603
3 years ago
Reply to  SonneM1988

Yeah, I just meant. You don’t know how the other rabbits react when one suddenly smells different.

William1307
3 years ago

No, of course not. The other rabbits stay home. What are they supposed to have unnecessarily all this transport stress?

And I would also separate the freshly operated animal from the others at least one night.

Gordonsetter132
3 years ago

Hello πŸ€—πŸ™‹πŸ½

Yes, it’s really good to take all the rabbits to my vet. I can say from my own experience that the rabbits are less anxious and nervous. The rabbits calm each other and give themselves safety.

In a castration, however, it doesn’t make sense because the rabbit is taken to the surgery anyway and it takes quite a long time to wake up. When we had one of our males castrated, we even had to drive home.

After surgery, you should first separate the animals that can heal the wound.

For further questions, please contact

Dear Greetings I hope I could help you

Gordonsetter132
3 years ago
Reply to  SonneM1988

Hello

Usually, 6 weeks are recommended at least for females and males. However, we have separated them only 5 weeks and then reunited that you must do too.

LG

Gordonsetter132
3 years ago

Okay, but it’s not different.

LG

MysticCoal
3 years ago

HeyπŸ‘‹πŸ»πŸ™‹πŸ» ♀️

In a simple check or I’d always take the nins, but no surgery. There the others can’t soothe much anyway, as you can take the rabbit back right after it’s woken up. After that, I would keep the rambling away from the others, as the wounds must heal. I would recommend, however, that the enclosure is separated by a fence so that it can sniff and the rambling does not feel lonely and can relax.

SammyKitty0708
3 years ago

No, then, you’re not going to stress the poor.

It would have been best if all three had come on the same day. Then you can get them together and they smell all three equal. Sometimes, animals react a little weird when an artisan smells like a vet.

PinkLady1001
3 years ago

Best to bring all friends in the box or a cuddly car padded

Nussbecher
3 years ago

No. Just take the rabbit to be cast. The stress does not have to have all animals.