Lilly and Balu
Two fluffy dwarf rabbits
Dwarf doe Lilly and her partner lived in an open-plan home with a very animal-loving lady until Lilly’s older partner died. Balu was acquired so that Lilly didn’t have to live alone, because a life in pairs is also nicer for animals.
Lilly and Baloo's journey
Lilly had been adopted by another family and Baloo came to the animal-loving lady from a pet shop. He looked a little sad from his cage. Baloo also had a severe cold and she felt a great need to rescue the dwarf rabbit, so to speak.
One-and-a-half-year-old Lilly and one-year-old Baloo were neutered, and the rabbits’ lives were simply wonderful.
Sometimes animals have to make way
The family was expecting a baby and when the baby was born, it soon became apparent that it was allergic to animal hair. If you are an animal-loving person and your own child unfortunately reacts hypersensitively to animal hair, you are initially at a loss and sad. Unfortunately, the solution was that the dwarf rabbits Lilly and Balu needed a new home. Under no circumstances should they end up as snake food.
The young mum was at the end of her tether. She loved her baby, of course, but also the dwarf rabbits. She had grown so fond of both of them as if they were her own “children”. Balu and Lilly love to cuddle, be stroked and happily hop around the flat, but they were jeopardising the baby’s health. Where should the two pretty dwarf rabbits go now? The search should end happily.
Gut Aiderbichl as a new home
home
The two beautiful dwarf rabbits quickly made friends with the rabbits in the Aiderbichler rabbit house. Baloo is also a handsome one, but Lilly made it clear from the start that he was her sole partner. The hierarchy was clear, they all get along splendidly and hop around happily and contentedly in the rabbit house. In a few months’ time, they will all be able to go into the rabbit enclosure and enjoy the first warm rays of spring sunshine. There are numerous hiding places, little houses and bushes in the enclosure where the rabbits like to seek shelter.
All's well that ends well
Although her great love for Lilly and Balu was somewhat clouded by her own little daughter’s allergy to animal hair, her love for the animals led the young woman to contact Gut Aiderbichl. She is probably of the same opinion as Dieter Ehrengruber: “There’s no such thing as can’t”.
Lilly and Balu have some wonderful, carefree years ahead of them and their happy hopping in the rabbit hutch says: “It was the right thing to do”.