I love how the cat stops and gets a little self conscious when they see the camera. “Um … I’m not doing anything … I’m completely normal … nothing to see here ….”
@@trashbag6406 Yeah supervision is a MUST when you introduce basically any animal with each-other, but luckily in this video the rabbit nor the cat seem to be uncomfortable, remember! Just because one animal is comfortable doesn’t mean the other is when introducing two different species.
@@trashbag6406It also depends on the individual animals. I've had this mix for 4yrs now. My cat does go after the rare mouse if one snuck in, but never my cat sized rabbit. He knows that's *unacceptable.* He's a skittish cat, friendly with my rabbit, but I still keep them separated (rabbit free roams my room, so I shut my door) if I'm away. Sometimes, as weird as it sounds, you'll see folks with bossy rabbits who run the show and bosses cats around.
Something I've observed with domestic cats - namely my own _orange_ cats - is that they don't seem to see prey animals of a certain size upward as prey, but almost as though it's another cat. Another very _weird_ cat. My first orange, the late Nemo, together eith my 2nd orange cat Bubbles, were with us when we were getting out of a homelessness situation. We stayed at some friends' apartment with them while waiting until we had enough money to go stay in a very cheap hotel. While we were there, the cats cohabitated with our friends' pet fish, a Dwarf Robo hamster, and their beautiful pet rabbit. I could see the crazy twinkle in Nemo's eyes when he looked up at the tiny hamster cage, and with their permission, moved the hamster to a different room (the cats were confined to one specific room). Their bunny Snow, however, piqued the cats' curiosity. A curiosity not unlike that sparked in a dog who does that funny and adorable head tilt. They look at her like she was some sort of strange cat. She was a puzzle to them, like they couldn't figure out why her ears were so long or why she didn't have any dry food for cats. They never tried to enter her open-top cage, even though they had access to it and could even jump in. They simple perceived as this weirdly "non-threatening" "cat". Very sweet video. Your bunny is a beautiful deep ash color, and your ginger baby has the cutest, sweetest face.
Кот говорит: вот,кролик вырос,мясо и шкурка мне на зиму,короче я щас вылежу,приведу в порядок,а вы там по аккуратнее,два раза не буду ,уже ваши проблемы будут,короче гардероб должен пополнится 😅😅😅
Cats groom each other as a form of social bonding and so do rabbits, lion prides groom each other for the same reason. It's not necessarily a dominance thing. It's a sign of friendship and bonding with one another, though rabbits will try to make another rabbit groom them as a sign of dominance.
Knowing that cats hunt rabbits and rabbits naturally avoid cats makes this video particularly interesting. I'm guessing these two must have been brought up together from a very young age. My 5 months kittens never got along with my equally young rabbits.
Remember when we used to have that technology that allowed the video to conform to the screen size? I miss those times. We were all so full of ambition