Breeder Directory

Welcome to the ROTW Breeder's Directory. If you would like to be included in the directory, either reply to this thread on the Rabbits On The Web Forums, or contact me. Please note that this is an ongoing project, and at this time, the ROTW Forums have the most current info.

When you ask to be included in our directory, please give the following information:

  • Breed
  • Owner's Name
  • Rabbitry Name
  • URL (of website) or Email address (Contact Info) (OPTIONAL)
  • Location (Contact Info) (A general area, like Virginia, Southern California, Northeastern US, British Columbia, or Japan would be fine.)
  • Address/P.O. Box, City, State, Postal/ZIP Code, Country (Contact Info) (OPTIONAL)
  • Phone Number (Contact Info) (OPTIONAL)


Please be sure you give us at least some kind of Contact Info if you want our directory to do you any good!

Also, if you have a banner for your web site, let me know, and I will put your link on our special Featured Breeders list.

Thanks!

Rachel of Rosebud's RabbitTree




Featured Breeders!


Welcome to rabbitsontheweb.com

Note from the maintainers
Welcome to www.rabbitsontheweb.com. There is a lot of history behind this website. We aim to be an Internet community focused on providing quality factual information about rabbits, cavies and other small animals where there is enough interest. If you are looking for rabbit information or have any problems, feel free to search for your answers.

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Thank you!

End of the Beginning!

It's that time of a young rabbit breeders' "career": I've become a young adult and life is calling, so for a time I won't be breeding or showing rabbits. Unlike most, I am not selling my supplies, as I have witnessed friends sell out only to get back in and pay for their equipment all over again!

But I am selling most of my rabbits, the ones I have left being the sweetest of the bunch or my favorite breeding does/bucks.

It is a bittersweet time. I had, at most, 25 rabbits at one time. Now I have 8. There is a lot less work, the rabbits get more time with me, and I enjoy being in an uncluttered barn! However, I miss the babies. Watching them develop at super fast speeds, figuring out the world, watching their bodies and minds develop... it was one of my favorite things to witness. On the plus side, I also don't have to witness the sad side of having baby rabbits around, the stillborns or the faders, they broke my heart everytime. However, their counterparts made it worth it to continue breeding.

Featured Breeders

Mini Rex





Mini Rex

Pennsylvania


Owner's Name:  Kelly Garrity
Rabbitry Name:  Midori no Daichi Rabbitry
URL:  http://www.chini-mini.com
Email Address:  fubarbun@ptd.net
Location:  North Eastern PA
Address:  RR 8 Box 4120, Saylorsburg, PA 18353-9714
Phone Number:  (570) 992-7508
Shipping?  Yes, we DO ship!

Netherland Dwarfs

California


Jackie - Cutie Pie Acres
http://www.angelfire.com/ct3/cutiepieacres
South California

Illinois

Stacey Scott - Promise Land Rabbitry
http://www.promiselandrabbitry.com/
Greenville, Illinois

Ohio

Mindy,Jeremy and Chris Boday-Little Rebels Rabbitry
www.geocities.com/littlerebelsrabbitry
Waynesfield,OH

Tiffany Damman-Damman Rabbitry
http://dammanrabbitry.tripod.com
NW Ohio

The Oranges Are Here!

Well last night one of my best bunny buds, and dearest friend who got me started in the rabbit habbit, called me exclaiming she had just bought an entire herd of Orange Netherland Dwarfs and wanted to know if I wanted some.  I was like, "Um......heck yeah!".  LOL.  I've been wanting Orange dwarfs for like forever and only had 1 Orange dwarf at this point.  Anywho........to make things more short, she came over and delivered a trio of 3 Oranges (1 buck & 2 does) from the herd she just bought and she also brought one of her proven Orange brood does to help me get started wi

And the waiting game continues

I keep thinking that my foot is going to get better and I can get back to normal. For those of you that don't know I shattered my heel in July and nothing's been the same since. I thought on Oct 20th I was going to be able to walk again, but found out today that weight bearing doesn't mean walking! It's probably going to be the ned of the year before I'm "walking" like normal.

It so nerve racking, not being able to just get up and do the things that need to be done. My mom is living with us and she and my boys do not see eye to eye on things. There is always something wrong or someone upset. The pressure is just so hard. Plus I haven't been able to do much with my rabbits. My oldest son helped me this past weekend to get some pictures taken and some does bred. My mom and son go to the barn on the weekdays to feed and water and everyday the come back not talking. My mom likes to get there and get it done, whereas my son prefers to go around and play with all his rabbits first before he very slowly gets the chores done.


Barn Count 2006

Well I did my fair entry yesterday (late like always, luckily the secreatry is very flexible.) I entered everything in the barn except the Netherlands and the 4 that run loose in the empty part of the barn as a test to see how they do. HOW am I going to get these guys to the fair I dont know, I think I only have 9 carrier holes! YIKES looks like 3 trips, Maybe I will jsut use a couple cat carriers or something. Carboard boxes?? I have 21 rabbits entered leaving 5 netherland dwarfs(3 babies) and the 4 loose bunnies, The 5 nethies I hope to pass along to someone else or they are going in the other side of the barn also as I am getting my Brittania Petits back.

Deleting a blog entry

Ok how do you do it? I was excited about the show this past weekend but decided that it just sounded like so much bragging and now I can't find how to delete it?

Around the barn

Well around our barn there are only dwarf hotots. About half of which are in a serious molt right now. But I am happy to say out of the half that aren't in that dreaded state, between my son in youth and myself in open we took 4 BOB's this past weekend and 1 BOS making another 3 of our rabbits GC eligable and two more pretty close. All in all a good start to the fall show season for us.

FAIR TIME!

wow what a long day! wheew! we had i think close to 450 rabbits for our fair show. we had 3 judges and everything went pretty well. only problem we had was no help running rabbits so we were doing like 5 things at once. running rabbits, setting up classes, table writing, answering the publics questions, and keeping unknowing little kids from behind the table! got a leg on my nice copper satin doe! we had fun. BIS was a dutch, runner up was a brittania pettite. going back out today, have some rabbits for sale, its easier to sell them onsite, than over the phone. (they have to commit on the spot, as in fork over the cash! lol!)

the satin

the satin is a commercial breed, with 11 recognized varieties. they are one of only 3 breeds with the unique sheen that makes them so striking. as adults they usually weigh between 8 1/2 and 10 pounds. they are a good choice for meat. and produce very well and are good mothers. they are also a great breed to raise to produce beautiful furs.

the satin is recognized in the following beautiful varieties: black, blue, broken, californian, chinchilla, chocolate, copper, otter, red, siamese, and white.  The otter group is recognized in black, blue, chocolate, and lilac.

Question: Adding content to book pages...

Will, how have you intended content to be added to already created book pages?  For example, I added a list of the reconized satin varieties to the 'the satin' book entry.  Should I add it directly to the page (as I did), or as a comment to be posted below?  I'm just thinking that it looks more uniform and makes more sense to add it directly to the page?  But, then if someone wanted to tidy up poor grammar or spelling that someone else wrote, it could create a bit of a sensitive situation.    Marie 

hurry up and wait......

Not much going on here. i went through a litter of satins yesterday i think they are around 6-7 weeks, didnt look really. some nice looking babies tho. too bad not a one of them is a RECOGNIZED color.....*sigh* oh well. puzzle pieces puzzle pieces puzzle pieces.....

The open class rabbit show at the fair starts on saturday morning. had to borrow some carriers so i can get them all there in one trip. hopefully coming home wont be so cramped. planning to sell a bunch! i need some empty cages!!

We are only there for 3 days (come home monday night). so it should be pretty easy on the bunnies. watched the weather reports this morning. and should be in the low to mid 80's over the weekend. so it will warm up but not be scorching either. yay!

american fuzzy lop

the american fuzzy lop, is the 2nd smallest lop breed. they are a breed apart from the other lops because they are also a wooled breed! they are much more than just a holland lop with wool! they are a bit bigger, they are posed differently, and have a different headset. of course with the wool their points are distributed differently.

Holland Lop

the holland lop is the smallest of the lop breeds. they are properly posed semi upright, and have a high head set. they are most common in tort. but come in many different colors in both broken and solid. they are well known for their beautiful bulldog style heads. they tend to be naturally high strung, and very active little creatures. with tons of personality and character.

Mini Lop

Mini Lops are the 3rd smallest lop breed, original stock came from Germany and was refered to as the Klein Widder until the developer realized this name didn't exactly roll off the tongue in the Americas. In essence it is a miniature version of the French Lop, with two distinct body types: The Classic/Western type (a little longer in body, more massive) and the Modern/Eastern type (very short bodied, as wide as they are long as they are deep for the most part). In recent years in the west, the two types are bleeding into one as rabbits from the East are joining the Western bloodlines. On the show table, the winning senior animals can weigh anywhere from 5-6.5lbs on average. The more massive-looking the animal, the more it is revered. Recently, the male "ideal weight" was increased to 6lbs, which is a good thing as the majority of the winning males were definately not under that weight! The males should have blocky heads, and the does should have slightly more refined heads.

Showing, Winnings and Placements!

Now that you have successfully entered your rabbit at a show, you will probably win some sort of placement. Rabbits are shown by their showroom classes, listed at the top of their respective breed page in ARBA's Standard of Perfection (SOP).

When you arrive at the rabbit show, take some time after checking in to find the table that your rabbit's breed will be shown at. Ususally they are listed on poster board along with the judges name. (if it is not listed, be patient more will come!) Make things easier by trying to get your carrier set up near the judges table, so that you can HEAR them call your Breed, Variety/group, Class and Sex! Most times the Showroom classifications and varieties are called in order as listed in the SOP.

Need Room to Grow!!!

The weather has finally cooled off now which is awesome. I wanted to do a lot more breedings this year, but with 3 months of constant extreme heat, that wasn't pratical or in the plan. So now, I want to breed. Like 8 does. I want a lot of jrs. to show at our February show and then in consequence, April & May. (Well, they may not be jrs. by then, but young Srs - I can deal with that). I had some awesome breedings this spring that lead to a lot of almost GC'd animals - they are just waiting to turn Sr. to get their Sr. leg!! Which is totally awesome! At the last show here, I basically did next to nothing on the show table becasue the stock that I had either sold/given to friends and 2nd family were kicking my butt! I only kept 2 juniors for myself this spring, and one of which passed away :(

So, yes, I want to repeat some of those breedings. I lost my beloved Maybelline who was going to be my little "Revlon the 2nd". She was a gorgeous lynx doe.

Rabbit Show Terminology

Showing Your Rabbit - The Basics!

Getting Started

...What does 'Breed', 'variety', 'Sex' and 'Class' stand for?

Breed : the actual breed of your rabbit, Ie: Mini Rex, Holland Lop, New Zealand, American Sable, English Angora.

Variety : V
ariety is the PHYSICAL COLOR of your rabbit. Some breeds lump colors together, like the Angoras, who show animals as either Colored or White....Cal marked Angoras are still white ;). Some other breeds like the Lops, show their rabbits as Broken Colored or Solid Colored. Breeds like the Jersey Wooly show under colored groups, such as Agouti, Self, Shaded, Tan Pattern or AOV. Others like the Mini Rex, New Zealand, Satin and Tan show under individual colors. They would be called Black, Blue, Broken, Chinchilla, Tortooise, Red, etc. And the netherland dwarfs show under both variety and group (variety first, then group) - but for entry sheet purposes you use the variety.

Sex :
If you have a little (or big) boy bunny, he is called a Buck, and girls are called Does.

Class :
Class is respective on breed size. There are 2 calssifications of rabbits for show, the 4 Class rabbits and the 6 Class rabbit breeds. 4 Class rabbits are ALL breeds that mature under 9lbs minimum weight, such as Netherland Dwarfs, Mini Rex, Rex, Americal Fuzzy Lops, English and French Angoras, and Polish . 6 Class rabbitsd mature over 9lbs at maturity, such as Cinnamons, Paliminos, Champange D'Argent, New Zealands Flemish Giants and Checkered Giants.
4 Class Rabbits have Senior Buck, Senior Doe, Junior Buck and junior Doe as their showroom classifications, hense the 4 Class name. 6 Class rabbits have Senior buck, Senior Doe, Intermediate Buck, Intermediate Doe, Senior Buck and Senior Doe, as you can see, they have 2 additional classifications, making them 6 Class rabbits. ALL juniors are rabbits between 3 months and not over 6 months of age. Seniors are all rabbits over 6 months of age. Intermediates are rabbits that are almost done growing, but still have a little bit of room for imrpovement. The 6 Class breeds can still be registered at 6 months of age like all rabbits but their showroom classifications are a little different. Intermediates are over 6 months of age, but not over 8 months of age as far as showing is concerned. occasionally you will see pre-juniors entered in a show, these are rabbits that are either too small and/ or too young to be entered as juniors. they are only allowed in breeds that list it (only certain 6 class breeds.) these animals dont get to compete for anything beyond their class. and are pretty much there only for comments.

Now that you know HOW to enter your purebred show rabbit into a rabbit show entry form, lets not forget that ALL important blank for the Ear Tattoo!
All rabbits entered in shows must have a permanent and LEDGIBLE marking in their left ear. There are many ways to do this from the battery operated or electrical pen style tattooers, and then there is also the clamp style tattooer. There is no limit as to what you can tattoo your rabbits, as this is for your OWN personal identification, and how the judge and yourself tell *your* White New Zealand Junior Doe appart from the other 25 White New Zealand Junior Does on the table.


Reboot Part 2: The Bunny Sitter is Less than Ideal

I found out today the bunny & house sitter will be a guy that knows next to nothing about rabbits.

Great.

This is going to mean a LOT of post its, bright colours, and signs all over my barn.
And to be on the safe side...
"NO TREATS"
"NO VISITORS"
"NO PETTING"
"NO EXTRA FOOD"

And... a return of a sign I printed for shows:
"Please do not feed fingers to rabbits!"

Gaaaah...

--Jenn

Visual editing for the site

I have enabled the TinyMCE editor for all text areas on the site.

This theoretically will make things easier for you all to enter. Please let me know if anyone has any problems.





EDIT: --->Will, what does the "p" stand for in your html? --Jenn/Pasada

Common Rabbit Vocab

**Will: what is the html code for italics & underline here?**

Add commonly-used rabbit vocab here as you see fit. Perhaps not the overly obviously, but if you'd be teaching a newbie. Or perhaps, newly made terms that RabbitWeb forum generates.

Here are the categories (to be added to later):

---> Breed Specifics

Dwarf Breed Genes
-BUD/BUB
-Peanuts
-Max Factor
-

Breeding Lingo
-Day 28: 4 weeks after breeding, this is when you put the "nestbox" in
-Nestbox: wooden or (perferably, for bacteria control) metal nestbox.
-Nestbox material: hay and/or woodchips. Some line the box bottom with removable cardboard ontop of the wood/metal bottom. After "kindling", the cardboard absorbs most of the fluids. You remove the carboard for sanitary reasons.

angoras

english

french

giant

satin