Search Results
7/7/2025, 10:28:46 PM
ah, there is a rodents thread.
Bunnies are rodents, so I'll forward a post I made in a different thread for your consideration, rodentbros.
>>5012423
Bunnies are rodents, so I'll forward a post I made in a different thread for your consideration, rodentbros.
>>5012423
7/6/2025, 10:35:37 PM
Stupid fucking glitched out Cuckchan won't let me make a thread, and there's not currently a bunny thread, so I'mma ask my question here since rabbits are essentially vegetarian cats.
I lost my pet recently, and I am really struggling because of it. He was a dwarf European rabbit, very fluffy, kind of a lovable troll, would almost never let me pet him, but he was starting to warm up to me.
It's particularly hard because I feel like I might have accidentally let him eat something poisonous to him. If anyone knows about this, please tell me, but I left out some corn chips, which are usually fine if he eats them as an occasional snack, but I failed to realise they might be dangerous because I prepared a dish that had onion powder on it and the chips were eaten on the same plate. Small chance they might have gotten some of the powder on them. Would that really have done him in if it was such a small bit, though? Not sure.
Anyway, my state is horrible on pet owners' rights and taxidermists aren't allowed here to preserve him. There's a place in Ohio that could do it, but it's so expensive that I feel like I shouldn't. He looks dignified, like he's just chilling out as usual. But I'm not sure what to do with his body now. Currently he's in a cardboard box in the bottom of my freezer so he doesn't decay or anything.
So if I were to leave him in the freezer long enough, would it eventually eliminate all the bacteria that would break him down and cause him to decay, thus preserving him on my own? Or will I need to eventually just dig a nice grave site for him and just put him in the ground and let nature take its course?
I lost my pet recently, and I am really struggling because of it. He was a dwarf European rabbit, very fluffy, kind of a lovable troll, would almost never let me pet him, but he was starting to warm up to me.
It's particularly hard because I feel like I might have accidentally let him eat something poisonous to him. If anyone knows about this, please tell me, but I left out some corn chips, which are usually fine if he eats them as an occasional snack, but I failed to realise they might be dangerous because I prepared a dish that had onion powder on it and the chips were eaten on the same plate. Small chance they might have gotten some of the powder on them. Would that really have done him in if it was such a small bit, though? Not sure.
Anyway, my state is horrible on pet owners' rights and taxidermists aren't allowed here to preserve him. There's a place in Ohio that could do it, but it's so expensive that I feel like I shouldn't. He looks dignified, like he's just chilling out as usual. But I'm not sure what to do with his body now. Currently he's in a cardboard box in the bottom of my freezer so he doesn't decay or anything.
So if I were to leave him in the freezer long enough, would it eventually eliminate all the bacteria that would break him down and cause him to decay, thus preserving him on my own? Or will I need to eventually just dig a nice grave site for him and just put him in the ground and let nature take its course?
7/4/2025, 5:27:09 AM
Page 1