Gainesville Rabbit Rescue

Gainesville Rabbit Rescue

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Dedicated to the rescue, rehabilitation and placement of abused, unwanted and neglected house rabbits We are ALWAYS LOOKING FOR VOLUNTEERS and FOSTER HOMES !!

Gainesville Rabbit Rescue is a non-profit, 501(c)(3) organization founded in 1998 by 2 University of Florida students. GRR's mission is to rescue, rehabilitate, and adopt out rabbits to loving homes, as well as educate current and potential rabbit owners. GRR does not turn away any rabbit regardless of disability, illness, age, or temperament (as space permits). Rescued rabbits are nursed back to

Photos from Gainesville Rabbit Rescue's post 06/06/2026

Bunny of the day is Adeline. She is a Lionhead Mix born around January of 2024. Adeline is a spunky little girl who needs to be in a home that will appreciate her personality. Once out of her cage she enjoys lots of pets and loves being on your lap. Adeline is great to hold, however, the act of picking her up is not her favorite thing.

Photos from Gainesville Rabbit Rescue's post 06/06/2026

Thank you for hosting bunny yoga today! The twelve rabbits brought all had a blast. Lots of zoomies, binkies, sploots and snuggles 🤍 We are so grateful for the Gainesville community for coming out and local businesses like Blackadder for supporting our cause. Adopt, don’t shop! Foster, volunteer, and donate!

06/03/2026

We are so far behind in what resources and financial assistance is needed for rabbit rescues through out this country and many other countries.
Some of the largest animal rescues refuse to even consider rabbits so grants are not available to us. Best Friends offers grants to their Pet Partners, yet they won't allow rabbit rescues. We rely on the people who love rabbits to send in donations so thank you to those of you who love all animals and not just the cats and dogs.

They are one of the most misunderstood, most mistreated, and most abandoned pets in the world. And the numbers? They will break your heart.

Rabbits are an obligate social species. They need companionship. It's not a preference - it's a biological requirement, woven into the very fabric of who they are. And yet, we have failed them in the loneliest way imaginable.

Forty-six percent. Nearly half. That's how many pet rabbits live entirely alone. In the UK alone, that means over 320,000 rabbits are spending their days in solitude, without a bonded partner to groom, snuggle, or simply be with. Think about that. Hundreds of thousands of gentle, social souls, trapped in silence. And the cruelty doesn't stop there. Of the rabbits who aren't neutered, 31% of owners cite "living alone" as the reason a vicious, heartbreaking cycle where these animals cannot safely have a companion because they haven't been sterilised, and they haven't been sterilised because they live alone. Round and round it goes, and the rabbit pays the price.

And where do these solitary creatures live? Too often, in spaces that are nothing short of shameful.

The Housing Deficit is real, and it's devastating. The space we give to our pet rabbits routinely falls below the legal minimums set for agricultural meat rabbits. Let that sink in. Animals raised for food are legally entitled to more room than our beloved pets. 30% of pet rabbits live in objectively inadequate housing - cramped little hutches with minimal or zero space to run, stretch, or express a single natural behaviour. A recent survey of eight popular online pet suppliers found that 70.5% of the single-story hutches sold did not even meet the legal space requirement for meat rabbits. And when measured against the Rabbit Welfare Association and Fund's minimum recommendation for pet rabbits (1.12m²)? Only 8.5% of commercial hutches made the grade. A staggering 91.5% failed. But here's the thing: rabbits will tell you, if only we'd listen. In behavioural tests, they will push weighted doors up to 45% of their own body weight just to reach a larger space. They are desperate. They are literally fighting for room to live.

And then there's what we feed them. Despite clear veterinary guidelines, inappropriate food remains a leading cause of premature death and chronic, silent suffering.

Twenty percent one in every five pet rabbits is still fed harmful, sugar-heavy muesli-style mixes as their main diet. Of those owners, 42% feed three or more tablespoons a day or offer unlimited access, virtually guaranteeing obesity, painful dental disease, and a shortened life. But even among those who think they're doing the right thing by feeding proper pellet "nuggets," 54% are still overfeeding offering three or more tablespoons daily when the standard recommendation is just one. And hay? The single most vital thing a rabbit needs to survive, the thing that keeps their delicate gut moving and prevents fatal gastrointestinal stasis? 10.6% of owners admit to feeding hay less than daily. Less than daily. Imagine slowly starving the very system that keeps them alive.

The healthcare gap is just as devastating. We still view rabbits as "cheap" pets, and that belief is killing them.

Only 79% of pet rabbits are even registered with a veterinary practice. They are significantly less likely to receive baseline preventative healthcare just 76% , compared to dogs at 94% and cats at 87% . And perhaps most tragically, only 61% of domestic rabbits are neutered. For unspayed female rabbits, the odds are terrifying: up to an 80% chance of developing uterine cancer by the age of three. Eighty percent. A preventable, agonising death, simply because someone didn't think it was worth the cost.

And so, the outcome is as predictable as it is devastating: abandonment.

Because owners vastly underestimate the cost — averaging $50 or more per month for proper hay, bedding, and exotic vet care and the lifelong commitment of 8 to 12 years, rabbits are discarded at staggering rates. They are the third most commonly abandoned pet in both the United States and the United Kingdom, trailing only cats and dogs. And every single year, in the quiet months following Easter, animal rescues brace themselves for the flood. The spike in surrenders is drastic, as those impulse-bought babies reach sexual maturity and become "destructive" in their tiny cages. The bunnies bought on a whim, in a flurry of springtime joy, are handed over without a second thought.

They didn't fail us. We failed them.

These are not "starter pets." They are not disposable. They are intelligent, sensitive, deeply social creatures who deserve space, companionship, proper care, and a life free from suffering. The data isn't just numbers on a page - it's the silent, lonely reality of over 320,000 rabbits in the UK alone, waiting in cramped hutches for a kindness that may never come.

We can do better. We must do better. Because they have no voice but ours.

Photos from Gainesville Rabbit Rescue's post 05/30/2026

Bunny of the day is Paulie. He is an English Spot Mix born around June of 2025. This handsome boy was housed outside and left when the house was
sold. Lucky for him the new owners called us. Paulie is a beautiful boy who will need a little extra care as he was not treated as a pet. He is very sweet and is learning that his new life is great and he will be a wonderful addition to almost any home.

05/30/2026

One of our latest rescues who came to us in terrible shape and who we are trying to save. This big girl named Marchesa is 4 years old and came in with severe arthritis in her back. Bloodwork was fine, xrays showed only the arthritis but she is like our former rescue boy Hercules, only wanting to lay on one side, so sores to deal with.
We are great believers in trying everything there is to not only save a rabbit's life, but have them have a great quality of life.
Thanks go out to Joanie, Adam and CES who is now fostering Marchesa. Please send healing prayers, vibes, good thoughts.

Photos from Gainesville Rabbit Rescue's post 05/29/2026

☁️Cream☁️

Cream was born in rescue 7 years ago and is sadly now back in rescue. She is the softest, most gorgeous ruby eyed Rex rabbit. Her fur feels like velvet. She has a very calm, mellow, laid back personality and is a bit on the shy side. While she’s been a single lady her whole life, we think she would love to have a boyfriend. Someone please give our older girl the dream home she deserves!

Photos from Association of Exotic Mammal Veterinarians's post 05/27/2026

Always import for us to learn more and more about our small animals even if we are not professional medical personnel.

05/27/2026

Today is St. Melangell day. May she continue to watch over bunnies and hares everywhere!

#🐇 🐰 2026

05/27/2026

**TRANSPORT FILLED**

SATURDAY MAY 30TH

DOVER, PA TO SEYMOUR, CT

It’s a Girl’s Trip! These three beauties (Mom and two daughters) need your help getting to Bunlandia Rabbit Rescue and Rehab this weekend! Can you help them make their way?

If this is your first time volunteering, please complete our volunteer registration here:
https://form.jotform.com/200424161896050

HOP 1: Dover, PA to Reading, PA; 64 miles, 1hr 20mins, 8am - 9:30am - FILLED, Lalita, thank you!

HOP 2: Reading, PA to Allentown, PA; 46 miles, 1hr 5 mins, 9:35am - 10:40am - FILLED, Kendy, thank you!

HOP 3: Allentown, PA to Morristown, NJ; 69 miles, 1hr 20mins, 10:45am - 12:05pm - FILLED, Amanda, thank you!

HOP 4: Morristown, NJ to White Plains, NY; 57 miles, 1hr, 12:10pm - 1:10pm - FILLED, Jean, thank you!

HOP 5: White Plains, NY to Seymour, CT; 54 miles, 1hr, 1:15-2:15pm - FILLED, Haya, thank you!

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Gainesville, FL