Anyone know any close pet stores? ASAP?

I have persuaded my mom to get me mini bunny :P...but the one i found at pet merchandise is 3 months old, still veryyy cute, but i was hoping for a little younger. Does anyone know any fitting pet stores with healthy animals where i can find MINI (thats the breed) bunnies? IF POSSIBLE please grant me some located in Bergen County. IF NOT please post some that are close. again i am looking for mini bunnies..im not sure if they are call mini lop? idk! PLEAST WRITE SOME ASAP THANKS SO MUCH!! :]
The best thing to do is to adopt a rabbit from an animal shelter. The connect below will show you a lot of the small bunnies available in NJ, but you could also just beckon or go to your nearest animal shelter. I wouldn't be too set on breed, age, colour or anything else until you meet them - each rabbit is an individual and you inevitability to get to know their personalities more than anything. Make sure you read up profusely about what it takes to care for a rabbit, in the past you take one home. (Start with www.rabbit.org.) Babies are fun, but also can be more work, compared to right to be heard a 1-year-old who will have an easier time using a litter-box and will probably be calmer and more interested in snuggling.

Take your time contained by getting to know all the bunnies at the shelter, as this is a big decision and a long-term commitment: Rabbits can live more than 10 years! Good luck - rabbits are wonderful companions, and well worth the time and energy.

http://www.petfinder.com/search/search.c...
It would really help to give your location. Some pet stores, similar to petsmart or petco, have made it to be country wide, but some stores aren't that big. That is probably your case. Take PetLand for an example. they are nice little pet store to be precise not common in more than 10 states. I have never hear of any place called Bergen County. It is always going to be hard to single out a pet store at adjectives in a small rural county, let alone one that sells one specific animal.

Sorry I couldn't comfort
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Answers:    Hi.I've been raising and showing rabbits for 10 years. Rabbits make massively good pets with the right amount of attention and care. They are also particularly low maintenance. They do best alone, I never recommend housing them with another rabbit even if spayed and neuter. Spaying and neutering is really pointless, a waste of money, and an unnecessary risk and pain to the rabbits. Most claim that it affects the rabbits identity, but I have breeding bucks and does that are the sweetest rabbits you could ever find and have had fixed rabbits bite me, so really it adjectives boils down to the rabbits individual personality and the amount of attention and handling it gets. Adequate attention from you is really the best option. The rule of thumb for the hold is that they need a cage big enough that they can lay stretched out contained by any direction and stand on their hind legs without hitting the top. Cages should be wire floored with a dropping jar (with pine sawdust, not cedar) so that they are not sitting in their droppings, the only thing you enjoy to watch with that is whether they get sore hocks. Sore hocks are places rubbed raw on their feet, which whether they get them should have Preparation H applied to them twice a day until heal. But if you get a plastic resting mat with slots contained by it so droppings can still fall through they should be fine and not have any problems. Their diet should consist of a good, level timothy pellet feed with 15-16% crude protein from somewhere like Tractor Supply or a nurture mill near you. They usually come in 25 or 50 lb. loads and cost between $8 and $15 and will last you a long time so store it in something like a rubbermaid bin to hold it fresh. Some brands I like are Purina, Showrite, Heinhold, Producers Pride, or DuMor. Please avoid pet or grocery store brands, as you can never tell how long it has be sitting on a shelf or what is in them exactly. You can feed a timothy mix hay whether you want to. I never recommend that rabbits be fed fruits, vegetables, or grass as it can cause fatal digestive problems and nearly always causes diarrhea, which results in dehydration. Other than the day by day feeding and watering all they really need is to be brushed beside a slicker brush about once a week and then nails clipped in the order of every 2 weeks. They do good inside or outside. Just please, please find a reputable breeder to buy a rabbit from if you choose to seize one. The American Rabbit Breeders Association is a good place to start. Mini lops (there's no such thing as just Mini's) gross just as good a pet as any other breed with the right amount of attention and handling. On the ARBA website you can research breeds a short time more and find some breeders. Breeders are not in it for profit, but to better their breed and they take great pride in their animals. They will be capable of help you and guide you through what you need to know, such as general handling, and will know how to better guarantee the animal's health. Pet store's hardly ever know where their animals are coming from and generally have diseases and other health defects that will cost hundreds surrounded by vet bills before ending in unnecessary heartbreak. Also, similar to I do many breeders offer non-show quality rabbits they own for a special pet price so it will not cost you any more than at a pet store. Hope this helps, rabbits are great to have and please feel free to contact me next to any other questions and if you need assistance finding a reputable breeder I can contact some breeders I know or get you some names/websites and find out some more information about breeders local to you. I'd be glad to help you surrounded by any way possible.
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