Ghost

Animal friends

Where to start with these two treasures. They are some of the most beloved bunnies by our volunteers, everyone knows and remembers Jake and Rosie!

Rosie is one of our special needs rabbits, she is almost entirely blind. Jake is her companion and they are utterly devoted to each other. You will most often find them resting in a big pile in the corner of their cage, just loving on each other. Jake is a bunny with a whole lot of personality. He is SO incredibly friendly, and will follow his favourite people around the rescue and get sad if they go somewhere without him. He’s a sooty fawn dwarf lop and is between 4-5 years of age.

Rosie and Jake were adopted last year but, sadly, they were returned to the rescue several months later through no fault of their own. It breaks my heart to think of them having that kind of rejection in their little lives.

If you have room in your heart and home for a bunny, please consider Rosie and Jake. They have so much to give the right forever family.

To tell you more about gorgeous rescue bunny Micah, we made this video! Over the next few days we’ll be putting up videos of several of our volunteers talking about different pets who they would like to shine a spotlight on and help to find a new home, the ones that have been overlooked or who are difficult to find a home for, the ones that have come to hold a special place in the hearts of our volunteers. I hope you enjoy them, please please share them with your friends both on and offline - the more people who see these videos, the more likely it is that these pets will find their forever families. Thank you!

(Source: PawsHereEdinburgh)

Dolly is a German lop, one of the biggest breeds we have currently at the rescue. She is one of our harder to place bunnies, one we’re struggling to find a forever home for.Could you be her forever family?Dolly, like most rabbits, does not like to be picked up. She becomes very scared and even aggressive if you try to do this. We ALWAYS recommend that people interact with their rabbits on their level, let them hop in and out of the cage themselves, and work on earning their trust rather than forcing them to be picked up in the air - in the wild, only a predator would pick a rabbit up in this way. It is their instinctive reaction to be really frightened of it.Although Dolly is bigger than most of our other rabbits, she is incredibly timid and shy and gets very scared of other bunnies that she’s not used to. At the rescue she is often too frightened to even hop out of her cage to play when given the chance.Dolly is an incredibly gentle girl who is just waiting for the right person to spend the time needed to get to know her, and to give her the confidence to come out of her shell.  For more information on Dolly, and how you might adopt her, check out the Paws Here blog!

Dolly is a German lop, one of the biggest breeds we have currently at the rescue. She is one of our harder to place bunnies, one we’re struggling to find a forever home for.

Could you be her forever family?

Dolly, like most rabbits, does not like to be picked up. She becomes very scared and even aggressive if you try to do this. We ALWAYS recommend that people interact with their rabbits on their level, let them hop in and out of the cage themselves, and work on earning their trust rather than forcing them to be picked up in the air - in the wild, only a predator would pick a rabbit up in this way. It is their instinctive reaction to be really frightened of it.

Although Dolly is bigger than most of our other rabbits, she is incredibly timid and shy and gets very scared of other bunnies that she’s not used to. At the rescue she is often too frightened to even hop out of her cage to play when given the chance.

Dolly is an incredibly gentle girl who is just waiting for the right person to spend the time needed to get to know her, and to give her the confidence to come out of her shell.  For more information on Dolly, and how you might adopt her, check out the Paws Here blog!

Rabbits - outdoor animals?

We recently got a comment posted on one of our old youtube videos, and I thought it would be worth posting the response here as well since it contains some valuable information about some subjects I’m very passionate about indeed (as many of you know!) :)

The welfare issues surrounding rabbits as pets are huge and complex, and Paws Here campaigns to close all “rabbit mills” and stop rabbits from being widely sold in pet shops to bring their situation more in line with the current situation for dogs and cats in the UK. If you have any questions, please feel free to send us an ask!

The comment was this: “The cages you keep them in are far too small,even the dog ones the reason you’re so full is because no one has the space too keep these outdoor animals in their loud, noisy houses. They love grazing on the grass and relaxing in the sunshine. I ‘m not talking about hamsters here or rats but seriously, rabbits and guinea pigs deserve a bigger life to just being kept in small enclosed spaces.

Here is my response:

I’m going to break this down point by point.

First, your contention that rabbits and guinea pigs be kept outside. Did you know that these animals:

  • were initially kept outdoors by monks as a food source like cattle, which is why they are kept outdoors today
  • will statistically live much shorter lives outdoors than indoors (which of course didn’t matter to the monks, who were going to eat them after all)
  • are statistically FAR more likely to be neglected outdoors than indoors
  • cannot maintain a safe temperature outdoors
  • are not safe from predators, who can stress them to illness or death even if they can’t physically kill them
  • are more likely to get parasites and illnesses outdoors
  • are MANY times more likely to end up in rescues from outdoor homes
  • are more lonely outdoors
  • are less friendly outdoors
  • are VERY different from wild rabbits, and even so a garden is nothing at all like the vast, densely populated underground warren a wild rabbit inhabits



You can read more about keeping rabbits and guinea pigs indoors where they are safe, happy, loved and warm in the articles that I’ve linked to in our video description above (here are the links -  http://pawshereedinburgh.co.uk/page_66 and http://www.allearssac.org/indoors.html and http://www.guineapigcages.com/location.htm and http://www.guineapigcages.com/forum/outdoor-environments/46491-whats-wrong-ke… and http://rabbitmatch.org/help-advice/why-keep-rabbits-indoors/). Please read them carefully, they contain important and useful information.


Now on to the cages we keep them in being too small. Did you know that our cages:

  • are significantly bigger than just about any outdoor hutch
  • are SIGNIFICANTLY bigger than they are required to be by law
  • are the largest size of dog crate it is possible to buy without going to a specialist



And that our animals get time outside of their cages every day to play, during which they frequently binky to show their happiness, and happily run back into their cages themselves once they are done?

Also, guinea pigs especially are easily overwhelmed by too much open space, as they are prey animals who are naturally crepuscular (active at dawn and dusk when the light is dim to avoid predators) and otherwise like to hide in enclosed spaces.

Our animals are all given daily health and wellness checks, and we adjust their environments to reflect how they’re doing physically and mentally.


Now as to the point about not rehoming to outdoor homes being the reason we are full of rescue animals. This is such a gross misunderstanding of the OVERWHELMING welfare issues that we deal with on a daily basis, that I would like to personally invite you to spend time at our rescue, daily, for a couple of weeks. This is a serious, 100% genuine invitation. Because that’s the only way I can think of to make you see the true and appalling situation, where EVERY SINGLE RESCUE is full of unwanted rescue rabbits and guinea pigs. EVERY SINGLE ONE. Even the ones who rehome to outdoor homes. Even the ones who ONLY rehome to outdoor homes.

Let me hit you with some facts:

  • Over 95% of our rescue rabbits and g.pigs come from outdoor homes
  • Outdoor pets are vastly more likely to be neglected
  • Our worst rescue rabbit that we have ever seen, who this year won the Burgess Wetnose Rescue Story of the Year Award, was in such a sorry state DUE TO BEING KEPT OUTSIDE
  • People don’t bond with their outdoor pets, so they are seen as more disposable. After all, would you even make your dog live outdoors all the time in all weather?
  • Rabbits are one of the most neglected pets in Britain. We believe that is because they are kept in a box at the bottom of the garden and never interacted with.


I will never place one of the precious creatures entrusted to this rescue in a situation where it is almost a statistical CERTAINTY that they will have a sad, short life. But that is NOT why we are full. Almost everyone who approaches us to adopt is approved & wants to keep their pets indoors. It is the sheer number of rabbits “produced” by breeding mills & sold like toys by big pet stores to irresponsible owners that has caused the current national crisis in rabbit welfare.

This is what I live and breathe every day, my work and my calling. This is what I know, what I dedicate my life to.

Please educate yourself, and ask again if you still don’t get it.


I’ll finish by saying that if you consider your home a “noisy, small, enclosed space” then don’t get a rabbit. Period. It’s not a god given right - if you can’t provide the right safe environment within your home then don’t get one. Simple.

Save Snowy

The other day, we told you about Snowy - one of our bunnies who has been diagnosed with tooth spurs - a painful, irritating and potentially life threatening problem that can only be fixed with surgery. Snowy will need a special diet and a special home to make sure the spurs don’t reoccur, and to have them monitored and treated if they do.

Snowy came to us last year with her friend Nancy for a holiday. They were never collected, and all attempts to contact their owners were rebuffed. It seems hard to believe, but this happens more often than you would think.

Snowy a cross breed with a lot of English Spot in there, she’s small and won’t grow any bigger. To the best of our knowledge she’s maybe 2-3 years old. She’s shy, but oh so sweet and not at all aggressive.

Thank you to all the people who have donated so far - we’ve raised £43 towards the cost of the surgery! We need to raise a further £65 to fully meet the cost and the operation is tomorrow. We’re still desperately trying to raise those funds as the shelter is so overstretched right now that we are even struggling to pay our rent. If you can donate at all, no matter how small an amount, please know that it will make a big difference to Snowy. You can donate here.

Even if you can’t donate or adopt Snowy, and don’t know anyone who can, PLEASE REBLOG! It helps us get her story out to as many people as possible, and to get attention for Paws Here! Every reblog helps! And if you’d like to follow us on Tumblr, Twitter or Facebook, that would be awesome and a great help too!

SHERLOCK SEEKS WATSON!
Sherlock the guinea pig is a brilliant, but eccentric young man who came to Paws Here recently. He’s not a normal pig. He sleeps in weird places, he doesn’t hide away like most pigs but likes to stand on top of his pigloo Mind Palace and chatter at passers by. Sometimes, he sleeps with one eye open, presumably in case Moriarty is up to something. As you can imagine, he’s having trouble finding a flatmate, which he needs in order to find a forever home.
Do YOU have a Watson who might get along with poor Sherlock? Let Paws Here know!

SHERLOCK SEEKS WATSON!

Sherlock the guinea pig is a brilliant, but eccentric young man who came to Paws Here recently. He’s not a normal pig. He sleeps in weird places, he doesn’t hide away like most pigs but likes to stand on top of his pigloo Mind Palace and chatter at passers by. Sometimes, he sleeps with one eye open, presumably in case Moriarty is up to something. As you can imagine, he’s having trouble finding a flatmate, which he needs in order to find a forever home.

Do YOU have a Watson who might get along with poor Sherlock? Let Paws Here know!

This is Dolly, a spayed female. She came to Paws Here early this year, and has settled in great. She loves running around and eating broccoli.

This is Dolly, a spayed female. She came to Paws Here early this year, and has settled in great. She loves running around and eating broccoli.

Know you can make a difference

I’m writing this post while sat in the shelter, a bunny happily binkying in a run beside me. For those who don’t know, rabbits binky - jump up in the air - when they are at their most happy and playful. They are literally jumping for joy.

We’re coming up on the five year anniversary of the founding of Paws Here, and that’s five years during which we’ve all worked so hard to give these forgotten, voiceless animals happiness and joy again. A new start, a new home, a saved life. All of us, our volunteers, supporters, foster carers, adopters, visitors - every single one of you has helped to do an incredible thing in the lives of these abandoned pets. It might not seem like much, but I know with everything in me that if we could ask them - the frightened, abused, lonely animals whose lives we turn around even if only for a few measly hours of happiness, even if it’s only someone to hold them just once with love and gentleness so that they’re not afraid at the end - I know that they would be able to express better than I can how important the work we do for them is, how much it’s helped and changed and saved them.

I know they would want to thank you. Every one of you.

Unfortunately now I’m coming to you once again with a plea for help, for a very dear little rabbit called Snowy.

Let me tell you her story.

Snowy came to us last year with her friend Nancy for a holiday. They were never collected, and all attempts to contact their owners were rebuffed. It seems hard to believe, but this happens more often than you would think. After waiting month after long month, the decision was taken to rehome them.

Unfortunately, poor Snowy was being quite badly bullied at this point by Nancy, and it reached the point where we had to separate them. Nancy was easily paired up with another bunny and rehomed, however Snowy has been left affected by her negative experience. Frightened of other animals and people, withdrawing into herself, she’s been left alone.

We’re working hard to help Snowy overcome her fears, and two of our volunteers clubbed together to pay for her spaying a few months ago so that she has a better chance than ever of finding a companion and a forever home. Despite everything she’s been through, we have high hopes for this little rabbit. One day she’ll be binkying like the other rabbits, joyful at last.

However, in order for that to happen, Snowy needs potentially life saving surgery.

Just yesterday, volunteer Clare noticed that Snowy’s eyes were watering. We rushed her in to the vet where she was diagnosed with tooth spurs - a painful, irritating and potentially life threatening problem that can only be fixed with surgery. Snowy will need a special diet and a special home to make sure the spurs don’t reoccur, and to have them monitored and treated if they do.

I’m going to say this right now: I believe we can save her life. And I believe her life is worth saving.

Snowy has been booked in for surgery next Wednesday, and so the first thing we need to do is raise £108 to pay for this procedure. If anyone can donate anything at all, please do. No matter how small you think your contribution is, it makes a big big difference to Snowy. You can donate here.

The second thing we need to do feels, unbelievably, even more impossible. We need to find Snowy a forever home where she can get the quiet, no-pressure, stress free attention, love and care that she deserves. We need to find her a family that is prepared to take on a special needs rabbit with potential teeth problems. A “damaged” rabbit, physically and psychologically affected by the things which have happened to her. We need a family for Snowy that is prepared to work hard to find her an ideal bunny companion, because Snowy doesn’t always get on with other rabbits.

It seems so hopeless, when we have healthy, friendly, bouncy bunnies who have been waiting for homes for weeks and weeks, months, years even in some cases. How will Snowy ever find her family?

There’s a family out there for her. That’s another thing I know. Somewhere out there is someone with a heart big enough to take on this special girl. We just need to get her to them.

How can you help?

By spreading the word! Please please repost this, blog this, tell your friends on facebook and twitter and livejournal, tell the whole world. If we tell enough people, I know for sure that one of them will step forward to adopt our precious Snowy.

That’s all. That’s all I’m asking. Talk about her, be a voice for the voiceless.

I know you can do it.

Meet Ava -  a beautiful female bunny! She is quite shy but very sweet natured and loving. Come meet her!

Meet Ava -  a beautiful female bunny! She is quite shy but very sweet natured and loving. Come meet her!

This is Sophie, a spayed female. She is quite a large bunny so she’s looking for a home with plenty of space to run around. Come meet her!

This is Sophie, a spayed female. She is quite a large bunny so she’s looking for a home with plenty of space to run around. Come meet her!

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