The perfect pet for young children is a rabbit. Rabbits are small and cute and cuddly, cheap to feed and cheap to buy, quiet and don’t live nearly as long as a dog or a cat, so you won’t be looking after him 15 years from now.
And you can keep your rabbit indoors or outdoors as you choose.
A rabbit hutch is comprised of two main living areas. The first is a sleeping area where he should be able to sleep out of the weather to keep warm. The second is an outdoors run where he can run and jump as rabbits do.
The rabbit hutches that you find in pet shops are generally too small. They are too small for one rabbit let alone two. Rabbits are extremely active and need lots of exercise and for this reason most rabbits are unable to get sufficient quality exercise in a small hutch.
If he is to be an outdoors rabbit you can exercise him in a rabbit run that you can build for him that is a protected area where he is unable to escape and can exercise. This is normally accessible from his rabbit hutch.
But you can also keep a rabbit indoors. For example you can keep rabbit cages in the laundry where he will be warm and dry and happy.
And of course whether his hutch is used in or outside you will still need to clean it regularly.
But be aware that you should avoid putting wire on the floor of his rabbit hutch as rabbits do not like walking on wire.
If you keep your rabbit indoors however it’s important to remember, just as for an outdoors rabbit, that he will need some play and exercise time out of his hutch every day.
Why not have a room set aside in the house for rabbits daily exercise. Taking him out of the hutch, playing with him and exercising him is the best part of having a rabbit.
Though it takes a little effort rabbits can also be house trained, or what can be known as potty trained.
But you do need to do a little inspection before setting your rabbit playroom. Rabbits will happily disappear into tiny holes and can get stuck there, so make sure there are no dangerous holes anywhere in the room before he starts his play.
Then populate it with fun things such as plastic pipes to play in and you and your rabbit can play, and exercise, to your, and his, heart’s content.