Bunny wants to know if he may have a cuddle.
At least that one wants to cuddle
Darla likes cuddle
precious bunny
>>2190306
Bunny thinks that that bunny has human very well trained.
>>2190136
b-but my bunny doesn't like cuddling
>>2190306
is there video sauce?
>>2190306
> Rubs his buns.
> HRRMMMMM.... YESSSSSSS
> Stops rubbing buns for a moment and rubs his head.
> NO YOU WILL RUB BUNS AND NOTHING ELSE
>>2190629
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LzZ_LJNVRt8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrdUa9ZFJDs
i always feel bad looking at rabbits and guinea pigs because im a peruvian spic that eats them
>>2190303
Why is it so hard to get eyeliner that perfect as a human
>>2191257
right? mine looks more like this:
>>2191636
>>2191638
>>2191640
>>2191642
Yummy
More buns pls
>>2191644
>>2192130
>>2190136
I miss my wild bun so much, she got killed a bout a month back. A new bun has moved in but isn't nearly as friendly though seems to be coming around slowly.
>>2190136
thats a duck dude
>>2192685
You've managed to get a wild bunny to approach you?
Closest I ever got was this one rabbit I privately dubbed "smoke" back in Chicago; he lived in one of the parks. If I tossed him food, he would look at it, but he still wouldn't eat it unless I backed off about 6 feet or so.
He was a clever little guy too; in the winter you'd see him drag around discarded newspapers and wrap up in them.
>>2192705
Yeah she was here when I moved in about 3 years ago and after a few months of feeding her she got comfortable with taking food from my hand. its been a little over a month now and I am still kind of busted up about it.
Here we go
>>2192703
I appreciate this joke
>>2193448
wtf is wrong with you and what kind of sick freak does that
I want a bunny but they shit so goddamn much..
She is my beutty duquess of lithuania
who edc their bunny here?
>>2193448
remind me of
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-0HRs0FY2U
Warning: Lewd
>>2192705
Here's what I do to get close to wild animals
Dont approach directly in a straight line; zig zag.
Dont make direct eye contact. In fact, dont even point your face or body at them. They have to think they are the last thing on your mind.
Busy yourself fidgeting with something on the ground, a blade of grass, a stick, a rock. If he sees your attention is focused on something that is already close to you, he has no reason to anticipate further movement.
Take rest pauses, periods where you appear to be near napping. still facing away but can glance askew to monitor him.
When you move, make it appear to be a continuation of what you were doing, not something new. In other words, if you were playing with a blade of grass, keep looking at grass as you move.
As odd as it sounds, put whatever you are playing with near your mouth and pretend to be eating it. If you are foraging yourself, he can empathize and suspect that perhaps you are not viewing him as food.
Keep your limbs close it and generally oriented down. You want a small, slim profile. Flailing limbs make it difficult for the creature to anticipate what your next move is and appear like excited behavior.
Doing these things has gotten me especially close to wild rabbits and other small mammals if they are foraging or half-resting. If they themselves are already restless in search of something themselves, it is much harder.
>>2195675
Also
>zig zag
I wasnt clear. You have to stop a while and take a rest position before turning.
So its zig, stop, rest, fidget, telegraph next direction, physically announce that you are about to move, (show precursor movements before reaching full stride) then zag to new lateral but close position, repeat and so on
The points should be close together, vary in distance and not form a clear pattern. In total, it should look to the creature that you are actually passing by him when in fact you are getting closer, although your overall direction should seem to be moving past. You want to zig-zag without looking like you are back-tracking.
I hope I am explaining right. Im probably preaching to the choir. Maybe someone else can explain it better.
>>2195679
I saw a nature documentary where a guy did something like this to get close to a deer. He included talking to himself to appear less threatening.
>>2195686
> talking to himself t
Oh, thats good! I never thought of that, perhaps because its usually creatures that dont vocalize, and I am trying to match characteristics.
Now thats a good question: would a mute animal feel more or less threatened by an animal that can do something he cant?
I'll have to ponder that. But I see the rationale: A stalking creature does not do things that expose his position. So by vocalizing, the creature interprets that you are doing something unnecessary (unlike moving, which also makes sound) that blatantly exposes you to detection.
The creature recognizes that you are not sneaking, and among your other motions, concludes you are not concerned with his presence, and therefore he is not being targeted. Interesting, Technically speaking, I don't think the creature actually has the mental hardware to assume you even see him, adding to a sense of security. If one supposes they do, their own movement might indicate whether or not they thought you could see them, and then they would likely (at some level) re-assess your threat potential in deciding how boldly to move themselves.
But I dont think animals (especially small mammals) have the ability to actually conceive that other animals actually "see" them.
Theres a word for this animal cognitive/communication theory. It may be 'theory of mind'. Maybe one of you smarter guys who study that stuff might know. I remember it from primate studies.
It basically distinguishes an animals mind in whether or not its mental functions are capable of abstracting that other animals can think also and receive a communication. Or the grasp that other animals experience thought also, rather than just being animate objects.
I dont think we appreciate how much whether or not something is simply animate figures into an animals perception of their reality. Its a little thing to us, but to them, I suspect it is a primal, fundamental trigger.
>>2195390
Pretty easy to manage if you ask me.