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Talk
with any rabbit rescue or shelter that takes in rabbits and they will
tell you that the numbers of rabbits coming into their organizations
spike several weeks to several months post Easter because of the
numbers of rabbits being abandoned to shelters or worse, found as
stays. In rescue circles, this is referred to as The Easter Dump.
The rabbits have worn out their welcome and the ill-considered decision
to acquire them results in their being unwanted and “disposed of.”
Dumping of these Easter rabbits further burdens already stressed
resources and many deserving rabbits die because there are no
loving homes for them. Rabbits are the third most frequently
euthanized animals after cats and dogs.

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| Graphics by Fabio Paiva |
HERE ARE THE THINGS THAT COMMUNITIES AND INDIVIDUALS
SHOULD AVOID
1.
NEVER give rabbits or any animals as a gift. Acquiring a
family pet is a serious decision requiring responsible consideration.
2. In spite of their frequent association in popular
media, rabbits and children are most often not a good mix.
3.
If you are an organization (hotel, restaurant, photo studio, radio
station, etc.) do not sponsor events such as "Rabbit Raffles,"
"Bunny Brunches," photos with rabbits, etc. Instead, sponsor
a rabbit adoption / community education day in conjunction with your
local rabbit shelter or rabbit rescue organization (see #4). If
you are an individual, complain to the CEO of the parent
company of the offending the organization if all else fails.
See "No Live Animal Prizes" for help with possible violations of
the law and what to do about them.
Under the Animal
Welfare Act (AWA), proper animal care and comfort is required by the law. Click here for licensing
and registration guidelines for exhibitors under the AWA: www.aphis.usda.gov/ac/awlicreg/awlicreg.html#introduction. If there is a
rabbit exhibit without a required permit, call your local animal control authorities.
4.
NEVER buy a rabbit or any animal from a pet store, a rabbit
mill, or a breeder. This only encourages the breeding of
more rabbits when we are already killing the ones we have. This
is irresponsible and unethical when in the USA
we kill one animal every 9 seconds (cats, dogs, and rabbits in that
order) for no better reason than the lack of a loving home. If
you are an organization and have to have rabbits for your Easter event,
contact your local Humane Society or SPCA shelter and/or your local
rabbit rescue organization to work out a rabbit adoption day event
supervised by rabbit knowledgeable people. See links below to
find a rabbit organization near you.

WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP RABBITS DURING THE EASTER SEASON:

Get other flyers at
and at
2.
Politely request any organization planning to exploit rabbits not to do
so. Start by educating. If this fails, escalate step by
step. If you need help, contact us at rabbitwise@verizon.net
3.
Volunteer at your local shelter and/or rabbit rescue
organization. Most organizations require you to be at least 16
years of age.
Rescues at Rabbit References:
SPCA Shelters:
Humane Society Shelters:
4.
If you are an organization that wants to have something to do with
rabbits at Easter, do it responsibly. Contact your local shelter
and/or rabbit rescue and sponsor an adoption day for rescued
rabbits supervised by knowledgeable rabbit people. To find a
rescue and shelter, use the above links in #3. If you need help
e-mail us at rabbitwise@verizon.net
PLEASE NOTE:
If you see a hotel or other organization with a live rabbit event,
please check to see if it is a rabbit rescue and/or shelter sponsored
rescued rabbit adoption event supervised by rabbit knowledgeable
people. In March, 2006 RabbitWise mailed letters to the CEOs of
the parent companies of all hotels who operated properties in the USA
asking them not to use live rabbits for any Easter venues. We
suggested that if they had to have rabbits at their Easter promotions
to do it responsibly by contacting a rescue or shelter and have them
set up an adoption event on their property. Rabbits are not given
away or sold but must go thru the usual adoption process.
Information about care, children and rabbits, Easter and rabbits,
rabbit fact sheets is made available to the public. Care of
the rabbits on the premises is supervised by rabbit people. If this is
not the case please notify us immediately at rabbitwise@verizon.net
WHY
ADVOCATE THIS TYPE OF EVENT OR THE REALITIES OF
THE
BIG PICTURE
The issue RabbitWise is
trying to address is how to get more rescued rabbits
adopted. Anyone who has spent any time in pet stores
doing adoption events sponsored by shelters or rescues knows just how
tough the going is. These strategies have not been all
that successful in getting the euthanasia rates down for rabbits.
According to ASPCA statistics rabbits are still the third most commonly
euthanized animal in the USA.
Easter time, when interest in rabbits is high, presents a good
opportunity, if done responsibly, to educate about rabbits and possibly
find them some good homes. In order to generate interest in
rabbits, they need to be seen by people who may become potential
adopters. Hotels and photographers seem to want live rabbits for
their Easter promotions. Rescues
and shelters want to save rabbits’ lives. Instead of waiting until one
of these organizations offends Rabbitdom’s sensibilities, RabbitWise
decided to be proactive and try to get these groups together to get
more rabbits into a venue where they can increase the possibility of
being adopted by being seen by greater numbers of people. Even
those who don’t adopt could still be educated by the shelter and/or
rabbit people who would be supervising the event.
Of
course, care must be taken in how these events are set-up. The
top priority must be about the care and well-being of the
rabbits. Keep in mind that conditions in the shelter
where rabbits are usually housed often do not offer an ideal
environment. There's barking dogs, people coming and going, no
other rabbits for company, and limited space. Traffic at a
hotel is somewhat similar to traffic in the shelter or at an
adoption event. These rabbits just may be better off AND have a
greater possibility of being adopted at a hotel. While it's not
as good as living in a comfortable home with loving rabbit parents it
is better than facing a needle in the vein when their time runs out.
Rabbits
at hotel or photographers events must be supervised by experienced
rabbit people that are well aware of rabbit needs. Having
rabbit knowledgeable people supervising the event is required for RabbitWise’s approval
and we do check it out. With a rabbit person there, people
can be instructed on proper handling, etc. Rabbits selected
for these events should have more laid back personalities and be
accustomed to noisy events. At the adoption events, all
handling of rabbits must be supervised by rabbit people. Rabbits
should be given breaks from time to time.
Looking at the big picture reveals the terrible crisis currently going on with rescued
rabbits. For the last several years, RabbitWise’s Bunderground Railroad
has
been working on emergency placements and transports almost
every weekend. These projects have involved hundreds of
rabbits. There are always more in several areas of the
country at the same time that we just might not be able to find
resources for by their deadlines. It only gets worse after
the Easter dump. After that we're are faced with the rabbits
bought or won as prizes during carnival and fair season who will be
dumped shortly thereafter if they don't die first. This is not
even to mention the strain that Katrina rabbits put on an already
stressed system. Rabbit rescues across the nation are up to their
ears in rabbits and pleading for help. We need to do something to develop resources for these rabbits.
Rabbitdom
needs to change the ways we think about and do things. We should
not allow the perfect to be the enemy of the good. We should
improve our critical thinking skills, get in touch with the
big picture, and get involved with getting this huge national
number of rabbits better shots at getting homes. Quality
criticism of the animal rescue organizations always mentions the
lack of incorporating broader community participation in getting
animals to safety. We also need to come up with better ways
to generate foster and forever homes for buns. If you have any
input about this, we're all ears, as we say.
Does RabbitWise think
this situation is ideal? No. But these rabbits deserve a
shot at a home and this project is trying to give it to them. If
the hotel gets more brunch sales and points for being a good corporate
citizen, so be it. When you get lemons, you have to learn to make
lemonade. If more rabbits get homes, all the better for the
upcoming ones who are facing a nation with seriously dwindling rabbit
resources. It's time to do something innovative instead of
just wringing our hands. It'd be great if all rabbit people
got some venues going in their own communities that show off just what
great little critters rabbits are. Maybe then the terrible kill
rate will go down.
ORGANIZATIONS WITH
SUPERVISED ADOPTION EVENTS FOR RESCUED RABBITS
2006
PITTSBURGH RENAISSANCE: 107 North 6th Street, Pittsburgh,
PA 15222 (412-562-1200). Adoption Event for shelter rabbits from Western Pennsylvania Humane
Society Shelter.
CINCINNATI MARRIOTT NORTHEAST, 9664
Mason-Montgomery Road, Cincinnati, Ohio 45040; phone: (513)
459-9800 will have rabbits from the Tri-State Rabbit Rescue.
Tracy Thom manager of the group will be supervising the event that
focuses on education and adoption of rescued rabbits.
2007
2008


ACTION
NEEDED

GLAMOUR SHOTS
(Parent Company: Candid Color Systems):
Urge Glamour Shots to Shoot for a Compassionate Easter Season!
Around this time every year, calls begin pouring in to PETA from people
who are disheartened to learn that live rabbits are exploited as
props for Easter photos at Glamour Shots studios nationwide. PETA
appeals year after year to Glamour Shots' parent company, Candid
Color Systems, to institute a policy against the use of live
animals in photo promotions. We have yet to receive a response.
Glamour Shots photographers are neither zoologists nor veterinarians,
and they cannot be expected to understand rabbits' specialized
needs. Rabbits are exceedingly prone to stress-induced heart
failure, which they can easily succumb to when excited children
inadvertently handle them too roughly.
Such promotions encourage impressionable children to beg their parents
to get rabbits as companion animals, and pet stores are all too
ready to accommodate them. According to humane societies, many of
the bunnies bought for Easter die within weeks, victims of
unintentional neglect and cruelty. Others are abandoned, confined
to outdoor hutches, dumped at animal shelters, or simply let go
outdoors, where they usually starve or are killed by predators.
Please urge Candid Color Systems to follow the lead of Target,
JCPenney, Lifetouch Inc., and Sears Portrait Studio and stop using
live animals in promotions. Stuffed animals would be a simple,
reasonable, humane, and cost-effective alternative.
Please send polite correspondence only. Jack Counts Jr., CEO Candid Color Systems 1300 Metropolitan Ave. Oklahoma
City, OK 73108 1-800-336-4550 405-951-7343 (fax)
2006
The Glamour Shots Photo Studio in Orland Park, Illinois
is using live rabbits as props. A rabbit activist who called was
told "the rabbits are kept in cages in the back; their bedding is
changed every two days and they are fed food and water". This is not
how any rabbit should be kept. Store contact info is as follows:
Glamour Shots
2000
Orland Square
Orland
Park,IL 60462
Phone # 708-873-3244
Fax # 708-873-1145
Please check
to see if this studio is using live rabbits for Easter 2007. If so, please notify us at rabbitwise@verizon.net
2007
2008
PROJECT
IDEAS TO HELP RABBITS AT EASTER
HELP THE EASTER BUNNY HELP HOMELESS RABBITS
Start
an Easter fundraising project at your rabbit vet's office to help
homeless rabbits who are living at the shelters
and rabbit rescues in your area. This
is the time of year when thoughts and images of rabbits abound so
there is hope for much success for the rabbits and for increasing
sales of your vet's rabbit related products in his/her office. Here’s how the project works.
You will
supply your vet with an Easter basket containing plastic eggs and
a flyer that explains the project to their clients. Inside each egg is a post-it note with the name and location of a current homeless
rabbit. Anyone wishing to make a cash, check, or rabbit product donation can
select an egg from the basket. The post-it note inside the egg will then be stuck
to their donation so the product or money can be used for that particular rabbit. Also
give your vet a plastic envelope in which s/he can
collect cash and check donations and a small cardboard box in
which s/he can put the donated rabbit products. To cut expenses, ask them
to save the eggs and return them to you for future use. Collect all
materials shortly after the Easter holiday.
Ask
your vet place the basket in a location where most of his/her
clients will notice it but without interfering with their work. Underneath
the basket, place the flyer that explains the project to the
clients so that the office staff does not have to spend
time answering questions about it. Indicate where the homeless rabbits can be seen and include photos if possible. Make sure
that you leave your contact information in case there areany questions.
JELLYBEAN
RABBIT had the idea to send Make Mine Chocolate pins to his vets'
office to help raise awareness about "Easter Rabbits."
Here's the letter he sent with the pins:
| MAKE MINE CHOCOLATE PIN |
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| Click to Buy Yours! |
Jellybean Rabbit
Waller, TX
RE: There’s no such thing as a “Live” Easter Bunny L
Dear Drs. Saathoff, Schneider
and Justice,
This
Spring I’m on a letter writing campaign to help spread the
word about the Columbus House Rabbit Society’s “Make Mine
Chocolate”campaign to discourage humans from buying “live” bunnies as
Easter gifts.
I’m
sure my mom told you my sad story about how I was bred to be
an “Easter Bunny” and she and my dad rescued me from the Tractor
Supply Store because I had a real bad eye infection that hurt. Then,
your office referred my mom to Dr. Cruzen whom is a very rabbit
savvy vet, and takes great care of me along with the other three
bunnies in our house. Understandably, I worry about other bunnies
around Easter time.
So
on behalf of all bunnies, I have enclosed some “Make Mine Chocolate”
pins for you and your staff to wear if you would like to participate
and help remind your fellow humans that “Easter’s no fun for a Real
bun!”
Binkies,
Your
Lagomorph Friend
Jellybean
FROM CLICKER BUNNIES
Dear Fellow Bunny Lover:
As
you know Easter is the worst time of the year for bunnies as so many
adorable babies are bought as gifts only to be abandoned when the
novelty wears off. We are trying to encourage the public to give plush
or chocolate bunnies for Easter and then research and adopt from a
shelter after Easter. We have undertaken four initiatives to help promote shelter bunny
rescue:
- Public service announcement submitted to 350 radio stations across the US
- Free contest give-away of our clicker rabbit training book offered to 350 radio stations across the US
- Super Bunnies video posted to YouTube
- Press release sumbitted nationally and offerred to rabbit organizations around the world
Please take a look at the Super Bunnies video which is entertaining and promotes shelter rabbit adoption, spay/neuter and donation to shelters. Help promote rabbit adoption
by passing on this link to all your members and friends.
We
also have a link to the "Make Mine Chocolate" campaign, bunny coupon
for download and press release available that you can customize to suit
your own purposes and send to your local radio stations, TV stations
and newspapers. Rabbits are a popular media topic at Easter, so be sure
your message is seen too! You can download the press release from Clicker Bunny.com Click here for more videos and info about clicker training rabbits
Thanks for all you do to help the bunnies!
Joan and Teresa
ClickerBunny.com
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