ANSWERS: 9
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Have you considered keeping the rabbit? Your cat all ready loves it.
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maybe the baby rabbit doesn't have a family and needs a new one and your cat wants to be its new mommy. I think you should let it go for now but if it comes back you know its been banished and now have to give him a new home
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Watch the situation closely. If the mother rabbit accepts the baby, then let it go back to the mother. If not, keep it and raise it. Your cat sounds like it would be a good surrogate mother for the baby.
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Hi Jules. The mother rabbit will probably reject the bunny, so I would watch carefully, and if that is the case, keep and raise the bunny.
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She's probably slurping up all the flavor, before she digs in
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DO you know where the cat got the rabbit? It could have been brought from a lone way away. It might get rejected by I doubt it as rabbits don't seem to react to 'old' scent as much as from 'new scent and movement. It is very rare for any mother to reject their young from scent. It is mostly a myth.
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its just a mith the mother will still love her baby
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Your cat wasn't cleaning it, it was tasting it. Wild rabbits are a common prey for cats, especially those in rural areas (like barn cats or feral cats).
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Usually the rejecting from a rabbit mother is a myth. If I were you I'd keep a close eye on the rabbit and your cat. Your cat could be ready to eat it for it is easy prey.
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