Hi, I've replied to your facebook message to me, but have just found this. It's probably tidier, from everyone's point of view, to keep it all together, so I will copy/paste my reply here too.
'Hi, It's hard to say. Are they ok in their hutch together? It is possible to separate them now, but I would say to only do it if there is no other option. It might just be that being in the run is too much for her and them. She might be trying to keep them still, or control them. She might be stressed out and want some time away from them (this will depend on how big the run is). It's hard to know without seeing it, to be honest. I watched a doe carefully sit with her butt in the entrance so her baby had to stay in the nest and then, a few weeks later, do the same in reverse, so that he couldn't go back to his nest and had to be in the big wide world. But that would have been hard to interpret via speech/text. I would say to trust yourself and whether or not you think she is being aggressive, but a key point is how they are in their hutch together. What I would suggest is keeping mum and dad totally separate until she has been spayed and recovered. She won't recognise him if they just go back together as he will smell different due to the neutering so they will need a proper bonding process. When it comes to separating them from mum, you will probably need to move her to other accommodation (not with dad) rather than move the kits, so that's something to be aware of and have planned. Good luck.'
'Hi, It's hard to say. Are they ok in their hutch together? It is possible to separate them now, but I would say to only do it if there is no other option. It might just be that being in the run is too much for her and them. She might be trying to keep them still, or control them. She might be stressed out and want some time away from them (this will depend on how big the run is). It's hard to know without seeing it, to be honest. I watched a doe carefully sit with her butt in the entrance so her baby had to stay in the nest and then, a few weeks later, do the same in reverse, so that he couldn't go back to his nest and had to be in the big wide world. But that would have been hard to interpret via speech/text. I would say to trust yourself and whether or not you think she is being aggressive, but a key point is how they are in their hutch together. What I would suggest is keeping mum and dad totally separate until she has been spayed and recovered. She won't recognise him if they just go back together as he will smell different due to the neutering so they will need a proper bonding process. When it comes to separating them from mum, you will probably need to move her to other accommodation (not with dad) rather than move the kits, so that's something to be aware of and have planned. Good luck.'