SamuraiSaxen wrote:
KingdomOfRats wrote:
SamuraiSaxen wrote:
I wanted a bunny as a pet when I was little, but my mother said bunnies were stinky, she had bunnies when she was young. Despite of the words of my mother, I still wanna have a bunny

have had a semi lop eared rabbit [buck] before,and he did not stink in any way,get one [or two] if able to.
zooplus.co.uk has got a great rabbit hutch which am would have got to if had not decided on chinchilla instead:
http://www.zooplus.co.uk/shop/rodents/c ... ches/53359Maybe when I have my own house, I live with my parents, and they don't want bunnies

SamuraiSaxen,
is there no way can convince them?
is there a garden which could be used for hutch/run space?
or put an indoor hutch in bedroom to keep them in?
it's not easy to win over anti pet parents,as they likely see all the possible negatives [like whether they will be cleaned out often enough,handled enough etc] or think the place is going to get dirty from them,and rarely see the benefit the animal gives.
a rabbit is easy to look after,the biggest cost with them is at the beginning-injections,cost of rabbit,hutch etc-could save up for everything and show them at the end of it? they might like the idea more if able to show them they are not going to be suddenly making big payments out for them?
Tell them facts and stuff about them if not do that already,just be determined for a long fight,but never forceful or argue when they say no,they might eventually be nicer about having a rabbit,if show them how nice rabbits are,that they aren't going to be paying out big amounts of cash,and that the house is not going to stink.
there are some good indoor and not very big-but suitable hutches,and as long as the hutch is kept regulary clean-there won't be any smell problems.
took years to get own mum and dad to like rats,they both became rat fans in the end [mum had a phobia of rats originally but lost it after stroking the boys]and let the rats have the small room for their kingdom-
http://img99.imageshack.us/img99/8847/fkcagecn2.jpg