this link is for dogs
https://wagwalking.com/sense/can-dogs-only-hear-vowels
I think if the name of a rabbit is 1 to 2 syllable, they may react to it. So all these years, I keep the name of my bun to 1 to 2 syllable
so far, they don't react when I call their name, not in the past 20+ years
so now I wonder if hard consonance works better? has anyone try
"The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated." -- Gandhi
I AM NOW POSTING AS 'InspectorMorse' BECAUSE A TECHNICAL PROBLEM HAS LOCKED ME OUT OF MY 'Jack's-Jane' ACCOUNT ON SOME DEVICES !!
goofy, this is so goofy, this is really, really goofy
"The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated." -- Gandhi
I just did a test.
I trained my rabbits to the command "Hase, komm!" (rabbit, come!). Their ears perk up when I just say Hase, but they didn't bother to stand up. Komm alone got them moving to fetch their treat.![]()
What language is the word "Hase"?
"The greatness of a nation can be judged by the way its animals are treated." -- Gandhi
German. Although the right term would be Kaninchen, but domestic rabbits are generally referred to as Hasen, like hares, but which are referred to as Feldhasen (field hares). A somewhat sloppy use of terms.
Last edited by Preitler; 12-04-2020 at 04:22 PM.
This just prompted me to do something I've wondered for ages (I'm such a language nerd): look up the origins of KaninchenUseful to know about Hase v Kaninchen v Feldhase
I've found saying something multiple times works: 'bunnies bunnies bunnies' worked on Aboleth, 'Chibbs Chibbs Chibbs' works on Chibbs sometimes, moreso than just 'hey Chibbs'. Lopsy's deaf so no hope there XD
The geeky one... Pronouns: she/her.
Often available for bunny runs: PM for details.
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