Posted By BrokenBlue on 8/30/2017 11:45 AM
Hi, sorry if this is in the wrong place. Not really sure where it should go.
I would like to keep a small group of rabbits. This won’t be happening any time soon but you can never start researching too early I guess.
I have a few questions.
1. Would it be best to keep one male with a few females? Or all female? Or something else? (all rabbits will be spayed or neutered)
2. When adding a new bunny to an existing group how would bonding differ from bonding 2 rabbits?
3. How many rabbits could happily live in a 10ft by 5ft area (with an outdoor run and lots of playtime in a bunny proof room).
4. Does anybody on here keep more than 2 rabbits together who could share their experience?
If I do go ahead with this it will probably not be happening for a year or two so plenty of time to prepare.
Thanks in advance for any replies. 
1) Personality is more important. Submissive buns to a dominant bun is easiest, especially for a beginner.
2) It can differ slightly when adding a third/fourth/etc. because you have more options for how you go about it. I am adding a fourth to my trio at the moment. I have played it similar for the four as I did for the trio – one on one dates with new bun and an existing bun from the pair. I mostly focus on the bun that I think will be hardest to bond to the new one. For example with the trio it was the two girls so they got more one on one time. With the four, I’m adding a boy and I suspected my boy would like him the least so I have just started play dates with them. That isn’t the only way to do it though – I believe many people do start the bonding with the new rabbit and the existing one. But as others have said you do run the risk of splitting a current bond forever by adding another rabbit so that’s a risk you have to be willing to take.
3) My brain doesn’t work in ft but looks like someone has answered that. 
4) Well I have already shared mine a bit, but I do have a couple of bonding journals on the bonding thread. For the trio I had “change of plan, the Greebo and Lily bonding journal” because my original plan was to bond my two new ones into a second pair then bond the two pairs. I’m told that is easier. But Greebo had only just been neutered and took ages for hormones to leave his system whereas Lily was ready to be bonded so I went the trio route.
Then my new thread I have just started – “what do you call a group of four bunnies?”. So far it has been a few cuddle sessions where husband and I have just had them together to pat them. And one play date with Greebo doing an obsessive amount of humping and then nearly falling asleep on Terry’s back. Class act Greebo!
Please note: There was LOTS of pre bonding involved. Time to settle in, and then lots of pre bonding, is essential 99% of the time.
P.S. I think I saw you ask about letting a bun pick their own companion. It doesn’t always work because behaviour at a shelter can be different. But the idea is you bring your bun to a shelter that has spayed/neutered buns, and do speed dates with their buns. The one your bun picks will most likely be the one it ignores the most – grooming or much acknowledgement is rare on a date but ignoring is a good sign because secretly they aren’t ignoring. Aggression means no. It worked for Terry and his original girl who picked him, but it won’t always. And it doesn’t mean they are instantly bonded. The new bun will still need time to settle into new home, then pre bonding, then actual bonding.