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Bonding bunnies to bunnies and bunnies to other species like cats, dogs, guinea pigs requires a lot of gentle guidance especially during introductions in order to facilitate friendships. Even bunnies who have been introduced and seem friendly toward each other need guidance. They need to understand how to share highly desired resources such as litterboxes, hay, greens, attention from their caregivers, and their living spaces. Both prey (rabbits) and predator (cats, dogs) are instinctually driven to think resources will run out. Teaching them to rely on us to provide for their needs and helping them to feel safe builds their trust in us. Showing them how to share things of top value together helps them trust each other. My bonding techniques always include inductive reasoning whereby I look at every small seemingly insignificant behavior and analyze it, taking all the snipits, piecing them together, and forming big picture conclusions. Those summaries launch my strategies to help the animals become friends. There is also a need for deduction. Overlooking their general behavior provides necessary insights because I can form an overall premise, analyze it, and introduce a perfectly suited bespoke bonding plan. One of the reasons why I can bond what others determine are 'difficult or unbondables" is because of my use of inductive and deductive reasonings.
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AuthorAn avid animal lover, I became invested in improving their lives. Bonding mixed species together as well as same species is a mission so house animals can live happily together. I have successfully bonded many bunnies that had been red flagged as unbondable, bullies, or fiercely independent. Archives
October 2025
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