Posted By jerseygirl on 9/23/2017 3:36 AM
Hi Nara mk
I just have some questions to get some background info. Were the girls together before the spay? If so, you noticed some aggression starting then? Or they weren’t co-habiting but had time out in the same space together? How long had the mild aggression been happening prior to their spays?
Is her aggression at the other now more obvious when you are giving attention to the other? Or when you allow them in the same space?
Did the vet find any anomalies on the uterus/ovaries of either of the girls? How was their recovery right after the op?
There are not only changes occuring within her, but also your other girl. So there could even be changes in their smell only detectable to them. ie. your other rabbit smelling more foreign to her and her reacting to that.
They were always in the same room with Hazel in a pen and Ruvik roaming free, sometimes I’d let them out together and they would smell each other or sit a few feet apart. If Ruvik started a chase she’d immediately stop whenever I called out to her and she never tried to hurt Hazel through the pen (of course that all changed now that’s why I’m worried). It had been for quite some time, it started when I first separated them.
I used to have three girls: Ruvik and Leslie came together and adored each other, then I got Hazel. Leslie fought a lot with Hazel so I separated the couple from the late comer, and then Leslie got an injury through the pen from Hazel and died from the complications (My best guess since the vets know nothing). then I let Ruvik roam free because she didn’t want to stay in the pen and kept jumping over. That’s my best guess as to when the mild aggression started. about a year?
Ruvik’s aggression used to be only a tiny harmless nip through the pen and a silly chase, and she didn’t mind me giving attention to Hazel. Only when they are in the same space.
Yes the vet did find a big cyst on one of Ruvik’s ovaries, he said we’re lucky to have done the spay at the time or the outcome would’ve been bad. Both their recoveries were perfect as the vet said.