POPPY'S PAGE
Christine Elliott's Site Devoted to Rabbits Indoors & Outdoors
Links & Books
Useful Rabbiting Links
Rabbiting On - this is a monthly magazine produced by The British House Rabbit Association and really is a must for all bunny owners (house or garden).  It is full of incredibly valuable information, health advice, funny stories, loveable pictures, life saving phone numbers/contacts, bunny products and a memorial page for bunnies who deserve to be remembered.

www.bunnymail.co.uk
This is an online bunny shop selling toys and treats.  It also has advice on bunny care.

www.winking-cavy.co.uk
A site with lots of gifts for small animal lovers.

www.taylorsgardenbuildings.co.uk/store/customer/allproducts.php
This site has a whole range of garden furniture, but it has a section on pet houses.  If you click on rabbit hutches you will see they have a whole range of hutches and runs.  They also have special covers to keep your bunnies warm in winter and cool in summer.  If you have any questions about their products, they respond to your queries very quickly!

Good Bunny Books
The Really Useful Bunny Guide (Carolina James) - this was the first bunny book I bought.  It was my bunny bible for a long time.  It's an excellent first book to buy if you are just starting out with house rabbits.

Rabbit (Collins Family Pet Guides, David Taylor) £6.99 - a very detailed and comprehensive book, again especially if you're a first time bunny parent.

House Rabbit Handbook (Marinell Harriman) - full of good advice on all sorts of bunny subjects and illustrated by examples.

The Problem With Rabbits (Pat Rees) £2.99 - this is an interesting and thought provoking read.  It outlines all the problematic things about rabbits to put off those people who buy rabbits on a whim or as an easter present!  If you still home a rabbit after reading this book you must truly be a bunny lover!

One Hundred Ways To A Happy Bunny (Celia Haddon) £3.99 - at first I thought I'd made a mistake buying this book, as on first glance it seemed more of a quirky guide rather than a serious handbook for bunny owners.  However on further reading it does have some good advice.  It would be a nice gift for the younger rabbit owner as it's not too daunting a read.

How To Have  A Relaxed Rabbit (Emma Magnus) £2.75 - this is more of a pamphlet than a book and would be a good first read for new bunny owners.  It covers all sorts of topics from how to hold a rabbit safely, to how to introduce it to wearing a harness to rabbit behaviour.

Rabbit Nutrition (Virginia Richardson) - this is a great book most of all because it has colour photos to help identify the plants it discusses.  It gived information about edible wild plants, cultivated plants and vegetables and, most importantly of all, poisonous plants.  I think this will be a book I will refer to again and again.


The latter three of these books, along with other bunny titles, can be purchased from
www.rabbitwelfare.co.uk/catalog.  The others are available on Amazon and pet shops.