Someone dumped a pet rabbit a few miles away, it got reported to a rescue org that my wife is a member of, and we went and snatched it up before it got killed by a predator or car.
So now I have a 4th rabbit in my house (two, including this one, are temporary fosters) The permanent rabbits hate smelling the fosters on us. One of the fosters is terrified of the dogs so for the time being the dogs are not allowed in the basement where his pen is.
I do not recommend rabbits as pets.
Pros:
Mostly quiet. If they are alarmed, they can thump the floor pretty loud with their back legs, but that's about it.
One of the softest pets.
They can be litter-box trained, and to the extent they fail, their little poos are hard and dry and don't mess up your floors.
I have yet to see one that wants to dart out of the house.
They can eat lots of food waste.
They get along with our dogs pretty well.
They're creatures of habit. They don't mind the transfer from free-roaming the kitchen/living room to their hutch for the night.
Cons: Most don't like to be held, (but will consent to head/neck pats)
Dumb. So dumb.
They don't really come when they're called. Sometimes they come for food.
Want to chew on stuff. Including your house.
Want to climb on stuff. It took forever to get our first rabbit to abandon the idea of getting on our kitchen table to look for food.
It takes them about a quarter second to realize your charging cable is not as tasty as it smells, but that's always long enough to sever it.
Our bonded pair bully each other a lot. Both the girl and the boy will straddle the other and hump face. Neither of them like being face humped, but both do it to the other.
Our girl bunny won't stop eating the furniture and must be locked up if we're not in the room with her.
When the girl wants head/neck rubs, she sometimes bites. She's drawn blood on me and my wife.
Their quietness is also something of a con, since they sometimes get out of the area of the house where we've confined them. When that happens, they can be pretty hard to find.
I had to build a tunnel behind the couch to allow them to travel back there while blocking off access to the inside of the couch, where they wanted to hide and chew.
