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PSR - Please think before you buy live animals for easter

Public Service Reminder, please think before you buy live animals for Easter.

Those bunnies and colored chicks are cute, but they will soon grow up.

The majority of live animals bought for Easter will either be abandoned, or will die before they turn a year old.
 
Public Service Reminder, please think before you buy live animals for Easter.

Those bunnies and colored chicks are cute, but they will soon grow up.

The majority of live animals bought for Easter will either be abandoned, or will die before they turn a year old.

And then you can eat them when they aren't cute any more :awe:
 
Hmmm, I never even heard of anyone buying live animals for Easter. That just sounds stupid.

Been under a rock your whole life?

Example - http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/02/us/dyeing-easter-chicks-raises-concerns.html?_r=0

I saw a guy selling bunnies last sunday, had a sign up "easter bunnies for sale".

I have bought my kids bunnies for easter before. But we also built the rabbit hutch and took care of the rabbits. It was a fun project for the whole family.

But then again, not everyone wants to invest the time, effort or money into building a rabbit hutch. And some cities prohibit keeping rabbits and chickens.
 
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Been under a rock your whole life?

Example - http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/02/us/dyeing-easter-chicks-raises-concerns.html?_r=0

I saw a guy selling bunnies last sunday, had a sign up "easter bunnies for sale".

I have bought my kids bunnies for easter before. But we also built the rabbit hutch and took care of the rabbits. It was a fun project for the whole family.

hey dumbass, look at the date of that article.

and i've never heard of this either, sounds like something hicks and rednecks do.
 
Date of the article does not matter.

Selling chicks and bunnies for easter has been going on for decades. Maybe you city dwellers do not see it as much as people who live in the burbs or rural areas.

so you don't think that the article coming out on April 1st about coloring actual chickens instead of eggs has any relevance?

but yeah sounds like the hick/redneck thing was on the money though.
 
I wasn't aware people actually did this but it doesn't surprise me. Completely retarded idea.

*Giving animals as disposable gifts, that is.
 
Date of the article does not matter.

Selling chicks and bunnies for easter has been going on for decades. Maybe you city dwellers do not see it as much as people who live in the burbs or rural areas.

Eh, I live out in a rural part of CT and I've never heard of anyone doing this. I don't doubt it though, nothing fails to amaze me more than the stupidity of some people...
 
You mean people aren't eating those rabbits they get for kids? 😵

Hasenpfeffer

6 -8 slices bacon, finely chopped
2 rabbits, wild if possible, otherwise domestic
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon black pepper, freshly ground
1/2 cup flour
1/2 cup onion, finely chopped
3/4 cup red wine vinegar
1 cup chicken stock, preferably homemade
1 bay leaf

1 Heat the roaster or casserole over moderate heat and cook the bacon, stirring and turning it frequently, until crisp, about 10 minutes. Drain on paper towels. Set the pan with bacon fat aside for a few moments.

2 Cut the rabbit into serving pieces. Cut away and discard the belly meat.

3 Add the salt, pepper, and flour to a brown paper bag. Add a few rabbit pieces to the bag and shake to coat with flour mixture; repeat with remaining rabbit pieces.

4 Preheat the oven to 325°F.

5 Heat the reserved bacon fat in the pan over high heat until it sputters.

6 Brown the rabbit pieces on all sides, in batches; this should take about 10 minutes. Transfer them to a serving plate.

7 Pour off all but 2 tablespoon of fat and cook the onions in it until they are soft and translucent. Pour in the vinegar and chicken stock and add the bay leaf. Bring to a boil over high heat, scraping up any browned bits clinging to the bottom and sides of the pan.

8 Return the rabbit with juices to the roaster or casserole. Add the drained bacon. Cover the vessel tightly, and simmer for 1 1/2 hours, or until the rabbits are tender but not falling apart.

9 Serve the rabbit directly from the roaster or casserole, or arrange the pieces attractively on a heated platter.
 
I've never in my life known anyone to do this either. I guess you are telling the wrong people.
 
I've never in my life known anyone to do this either. I guess you are telling the wrong people.

It is generally the uneducated, as they will often buy a rabbit, stuff it in a cage and never let it out for the entirety of its life. It is really sad sometimes.
 
Date of the article does not matter.

Selling chicks and bunnies for easter has been going on for decades. Maybe you city dwellers do not see it as much as people who live in the burbs or rural areas.

I have a feeling this has a LOT to do with "Texas"

You know?that state that is trying VERY hard to catch up to California or New Jersey......:biggrin:
 
I've never in my life known anyone to do this either. I guess you are telling the wrong people.

There must be a lot of dumb people who do though if the human society has to complain about it every year. I guess they think rabbits are low maintenance pets for kids, in the same vein as a hamster. Truth is they require the same level of care and investment as a cat or dog does. They also don't like to be handled, making them unsuitable for children.
 
its done in europe and south america. We had pens so the animals always had good lives. Now I had a pet bunny when I was little. When I was around 4 I was told it ran away to the circus. I actually believed the memory and never questioned it till the family and I were sitting around the dinner table when I was about 15 and someone made a comment about a long dead family pet. I brough up my pet bunny and mentioned the old memory and the table started cracking up. My dad loved a brace of coneys.......


My niece got a bunny for her fourth birthday and that thing got crazy old. He basically behaved like a cat/dog hybrid hanging out and responding to calls. His cage would be left open and he would go in there and sleep and chill. Got crazy old and blind. Luckily my dad was too old to catch him to eat him. My dad had at the time early alzheimers and would chase the bunny around the house.
 
Only time i see people buying rabbits or chicks is if they plan on keeping them.

I don't think it happens as much as it used to.
 
Rabbits actually make great pets, but they're somewhere between a dog and a cat in terms of the amount of physical upkeep and attention they need.

You'll need a cage/kennel that the rabbit can feel secure in, and it will typically pick a corner of this to use as its bathroom. (Like cats and, incidentally, rats, rabbits can be litter trained.) However, they are naturally curious and a little bit sociable, and will want to spend time outside the cage for exercise, meeting guests, snuggling, etc.
 
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