View allAll Photos Tagged RABBIT

Should be going in the mail today! :) I'm crossing my fingers that my partner will love it!! It always makes me soooo nervous when sending something I've made, wondering if it will be adored.

 

blogged:

 

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Young rabbit foraging

It's great to see healthy wild rabbits in the garden, after seeing many with the myxomatosis virus last year !!

 

Thanks for stopping by, take care, stay safe and have a great weekend everyone !!

Remember rabbit manure tea goes on the garden not in your cup

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=XGLR18PpeHM

Rabbit eats lawn.

Taken at Wolseley Nature Centre

Found a shady spot to relax

Cambridgeshire.

Because I’m visiting The Netherlands for holidays, I went to my favorite spot near the dunes.

This wild rabbit bunny was curiously looking up from its borrow. I’m not sure but it looks like it is a pretty young one. Well, it may not be Rudolf but with this bunny shot I’m wishing you a happy Christmas and a happy New Year. Thank you all for your kind comments and faves this year;)

 

New entry in "Thelma" Farm...

Gosling Park

A rabbit came by the house today. He was shy so we didn't get to talk.

young rabbit emerging from a clay pipe

Rabbits are good at multiplying! Since Autumn has returned to school, several of the rabbits who live here are helping her with her multiplication homework.

 

Toy Sunday: Myths

I'm on holiday on one of the beautiful Dutch islands called Ameland. It seems like this island is over run by Wild Rabbits and some of them are very willing to pose for me

Rabbit youngster Frogwell Lane Chippenham Wilts, thought he was kinda cute

I think I accidently caught this bunny unawares, he sat there for about a minute in shock I think then he ran like the wind! Boy they can run fast!

It was asking me if I had ever tried the "Sizzler's All you can Eat Salad bar Buffet"?

Washing Rabbit taken in Great Ryburgh.

un lapin que j'ai croisé en pleine nature ! surement quelqu'un qui la laisser la ...

baby rabbits are called kittens. Rabbit kits are born with their eyes and ears sealed shut

Roses are hardy, but their ability to withstand low temperatures mean nothing when faced with a hungry rabbit. These are practical animals that will eat first what they can reach, meaning that your rose bushes are more likely to suffer leaf loss and damaged canes or stems if attacked by rabbits. The blossoms are usually up higher on the plant, often out of a rabbit’s reach, but that does not mean the petals will never be eaten.

Looks like the baby rabbits are out on their own now. There were many out early this morning.

  

Rabbit Shrine.

#Rabbit_Shrine #Rabbit #Shrine

 

bit.ly/1OmqAPK

A Rabbit on the run in the evening sun.

Together with my son I spent a week on my favorit Dutch island called Ameland. Apparently a large population of wild rabbits are living on this island and since they are used to human presence they are relatively easy to approach.

I don't know why this thing was sitting still there for 5 minutes or so.

European Rabbit / oryctolagus cuniculus. Suffolk. 28/06/18.

 

An image made in 2018 of a young rabbit sitting outside a burrow enjoying fantastic golden light. As the evening crept in, younger members of the warren community became noticeably braver! Among them were a couple of tiny, super-sweet kits that I would have loved to photograph. Being small, whenever they appeared they were mostly obscured by vegetation.

 

BEST VIEWED LARGE.

Grand Canyon National Park

Arizona, USA

© 2014 Alan Mackenzie.

 

www.alanmackenziephotography.com

 

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The rabbit may be common, but I've always found it a difficult animal to observe from close distances. In many ways, it's harder to photograph rabbits than deer. The slightest movement or sound and they will flee.

Explored Apr 03, 2017 #455

 

This photograph is for our camera club monthly project: April - "An Animal or Bird".

 

It has been a bit hectic of late and realising that today was the due date for the project,, we went to a local nature reserve in the hope of getting photographs of some of the residents. As it was a sunny afternoon, pretty much all of the residents of the reserve must have decided to go to Skegness (our local seaside town) for the afternoon. All that I saw was one lone rabbit trying to look inconspicuous amongst some tall reeds at the side of the path :-((

 

Rabbits have brown-grey fur, pale bellies and long ears (but these are relatively short compared with those of a hare). The underside of the tail is white – this can be seen as the rabbit runs away from danger, and acts as a warning to others nearby. Rabbits are not native to Britain; the Normans brought them here in the 12th century for their, then much-prized, fur and meat.

 

Today, rabbits are among our commonest and most widespread mammals. They live in a system of burrows called a warren. Rabbits use regular trails between their burrows and feeding areas, which often become worn and conspicuous. You may see a pile of rabbit droppings in a prominent place – this is a communal latrine also used as a territory marker.

 

Rabbits will eat leaves and shoots of a range of vegetation, including crops. In winter, grass, bulbs and bark. As their diet is hard to digest, rabbits eat their food twice. After eating they produce soft droppings that still have high nutritional value. They eat these, and then produce hard pellets of waste material.

 

Rabbits are prolific breeders and populations can quickly increase in the right conditions. Source: RSPB

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