Montreal SPCA urges fostering Easter bunnies before buying - Action News
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Montreal

Montreal SPCA urges fostering Easter bunnies before buying

Celebrating Easter may be an enticing reason to get a pet rabbit for some, but the folks at the Montreal SPCA are strongly advising against it.

Animal welfare agency gets around 260 abandoned bunnies a year, most of them arriving after Easter

Easter bunnies for 'rent'

10 years ago
Duration 2:05
The Montreal SPCA is running a rabbit fostering program for people who want a bunny around for Easter but who may not be able to commit to long-term care.

Celebrating Easter may be an enticing reason to get a pet rabbit for some families, but the folks at the Montreal SPCA are strongly advising against it.

The SPCA says more than 260 rabbits end up abandoned on itsdoorstep once Easter has come and gone. So the agency is encouraging people who want to have a bunny around for the holidaybut who cant necessarily commit to taking care of one long-termtofoster a rabbit instead.

The Desrochers family stopped by the Montreal SPCA to foster Endy. Father Michel said the family adopted a cat from the shelter in 2010 and supports the SPCA's work. (Marie-Claude Cabana/CBC)

Thats what the Desrochers family was doing on Saturday.

This way we can have it,to see if we like having the rabbit, said Michel Desrochers, who stopped by the SPCA with his two children to adopt a camel-coloured Endy. It looks pretty good so far!

He said the family adopted a cat from the SPCA in 2010, and he supportsthe animal shelters work.

For a $100 deposit, the SPCA provides bunny foster parents with a cage, food, a guarantee the animal is sterilized and tips on how to take care of the rabbit.

They cannot live in a cage 24/7. They need a minimum of four hours of exercise a day, so you do have to make sure that the room or the environments they're living in is secure for a rabbit. So make sure that your wires are protected because they will chew on them, said Anita Kapuscinska of the SPCA.

The SPCAs program was so successful that by Easter Sunday morning, all its rabbits had been placed in foster care. Kapuscinska is encouraging people to give a chanceto guinea pigs, degus (chinchilla-like rodents) and cats instead.