

– Handy Dandy Calendar: To doodle on regarding show dates and due dates. I mean, two years later, do we really care that Chad beat Rocky…AGAIN?

– Show records when Grand Champion Legs are won: Placements that didn’t win legs became extraneous. Easy reference to look up kits’ birth dates, as well as to keep track of which of your does consistently produce nice offspring.

Tells you at a glance who was bred to who and when. – Income and Expenses: Not fun, but must be done. That way, when someone contacts you about the rabbit they sold them, you’re not sitting there wondering which rabbit they bought. – Rabbits Sold: Write down every bunny sold and who you sold it to. It wasn’t as sophisticated anymore, but I trimmed it down to the records I actually kept and needed. In fact, I hardly ever filled out most of them.Įventually I cut the fat out of my record book. I had a lot more fun making record sheets than I had filling them out. I had record sheets to track nearly everything: litters, shows, feed economics, health, hereditary traits, rabbits sold, chores accomplished, show quality of developing juniors, you name it. But which ones really matter?Īs a teen, I made up all kinds of record sheets for my bunnies. It’s a fact: if you want to be successful in raising show rabbits, record keeping is vital. (Scroll down to skip all the chit-chat and get straight to the free downloads.) What Records should you keep to Raise Rabbits Successfully? Last Updated on Maby The Rabbit Smarties Team However, should you spot one, there are seven fur variations present: Common, Light Grey, Brown, Light Brown, Melanistic, Leucistic, and Albino.Deprecated: strstr(): Passing null to parameter #1 ($haystack) of type string is deprecated in /home/rabbiteq/public_html/rabbitsmarties/wp-content/plugins/woocommerce/includes/wc-page-functions.php on line 139 EMBRACE THE CHASEConsidering the vigilant nature of the European Rabbit, it may prove challenging for hunters to catch sight of in the terrain of Hirschfelden. It has an excellent sense of smell to detect threats, and when exposed in the open, which is typically during dawn, afternoon and dusk, it is constantly aware of its surroundings. It lives in burrows and spends roughly half of its time below ground. The European Rabbit is often sighted looking for cover and food sources in areas where human activity is present, such as pastures and crop fields. This DLC is free for owners of theHunter: Call of the Wild™. Recently, an expansive network of warrens was discovered near the crop fields in the Hirschfelden Hunting Reserve in Germany. The European Rabbit is a social and territorial animal known for living in large underground burrow systems called warrens.
