I want a bunny but my parents wont permit me attain 1...?
Okay so i really want a bunny but my parents wont let me get one. i told them i will completly pay for it (bunny, pen, food, treats, etc.) but they still wont let me get one. i asked y and they said because nobody will take thought of it whenever we go away on vacation,,, i own friends that i kno will take care of the bunny and ill rate them too. but my parents still wont let me get one. they say that i cant even hold my room clean for me and so iv been cleaning my room everyday and they STILL wont let me attain a bunny. iv tried everything i can... even doing extra chores but they wont let me. please give me some advocate on how to let them say yes.
Do you actually have the money? If you save up it shows you are wholehearted and proves your responsible. And if they don't allow you to you still have the money! Also find out about prices and where on earth you would get one and which one to get so you persuade them.
Pets are a lot of work and a lot of money - are you taking vet bills into consideration as very well? I have spent well over a thousand on my animals this year, and that is ordinary vet stuff, special food, and so on -
That aside...
How long have you been doing extra chores? How long own you been keeping your room clean? Are you home frequently? Do you own extracurriculars after school? Your parents are probably taking these things into consideration.
Lastly, it doesn't look good - it is your parent's house, essentially speaking, so bottom line is that what they right to be heard is the law under that roof. You may have to hang around until you are out of the house!
Just keeping proving to them that you're responsible...
Another suggestion... research bunnies on the internet, find out as much as you can and start pelting them with bunny facts:)
everybody wishes a cute little bunny...
THAT'S WHY THEY END UP IN CAGES THAT ARE TOO SMALL FOR THEM OUTSIDE ON THE SIDE OF GARAGES!
THEY ARE A LOT OF WORK... you won't think it's soooo cute after caring for and cleaning up after it all the time.
that's WHY!
Answers: show them this article: http://stress.more or less.com/od/lowstresslife...
also, keep cleaning your room,
well i guess just hold on to being responsible and dont bug them about it AT ALL about it...newly so you know my friend got a bunny and although she took good care of it it stunk so freaken discouraging
Rabbits don't require that much work when compared near most pets. They don't have to be walked everyday and they can have an automatic feeder so you don't own to worry about forgetting to feed them. You can do alike thing with there hose down as well. Rabbits can also be trained to use a litter pan in here cage making clean up very trouble-free. Another up side is that their litter pan will never smell if you keep it verbs (unlike a cat's litter box that stinks all the time no matter what) I suggest that you find some information just about how easy and enjoyable it is having a bunny as a pet and show it to your parents. Don't offer up on them, if you keep asking they may eventually give within. They may feel that this is just some fad your going through but DON'T STOP ASKING! I promise that whether you get a bunny you will love it very much. Oh and don't know how old you are but it age is a factor, I get my first rabbit when I was 11 and took care of it all on my own. Like I said they are not frozen work. I hope this helps and I hope you get your bunny :)
do research print it out and give it to them consequently show them how responsible u can be and then make good grades after try asking then hope i helped can i have 10 points i really obligation it?????
They don't similar to bunnies.Why not a cat?You can keep those outside and they won't run off as long as you stop by them and give them food.
this is how i get my bunny:
my cats are hunters.
one of my 3 cats was hunting what looked like a mole one day.
i HATE to see animals die so i go up close to it.
it was hurt.
but i saw that it wasn't a mole.. it was a bunny. a wild bunny.
i rescued it.
i asked my parents whether i could keep it and they said yes.
then 3 days later it died because it be eating since wild bunnies don't eat the food populace give them.
i was sad so my parents get me a new one.
THE END!
anyway, show them that your responsible. do unexpectedly good work. you are expected to verbs you room so they wont give you a bunny for that. do things that they would like you to do that they wouldn't think of short asking them. when they think your responsible enough they will let you enjoy one. bunnies need a lot of attention and they eat abundantly so you can't leave them alone while your on vacation. give him to a Pet Day Care or agree to a trusted friend or neighbor watch it. BUT, you can't just think that you can buy everything for the bunny. the supplies needed for the bunny, ENCLUDING THE BUNNY, can be markedly expensive. your going to have to buy it new food about every month or so and progress it's cage every week. they poop a lot so thats why. i had my bunny for nearly a year and a half now. you shouldn't have a enclose outside because of bad weather. if you keep hold of it in your room make sure you own a big room so you can let him out and let him jump around the room. they stipulation to exersize. let him out of his cage atleast once everyday.
i hope i helped.
I wouldn't let you either. That you're taking on responsibility now doesn't aim much when, in general, you do not. Your parents probably fear you'll acquire the rabbit, and a month or two down the road, when the initial excitement wears off, they'll be stuck looking after it.
The best thing you can do is quit pestering them. Continue to preserve your clean room, routinely do the new chores you've taken up, and don't fall put money on into old habits. If you can do that for a little while (and I don't tight-fisted a week. Wait a month or two. Actually work for it.) then you can ask again. Save your money; it's pricey to keep a rabbit. Research in the time between immediately and then; I seriously doubt you know as much as you should about owning a rabbit. When you're really prepared, your parents will agree, unless there's an unrelated reason they're not allowing it.