| Honestly, it doesn’t sound like you have any business owning animals if you can’t care for them properly and that includes providing shelter. |
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Why do you have outdoor rabbits? Ours is indoors, like a cat, and goes around the house. They aren’t supposed to be in crates full time.
Yes, completely litter trained as many are. Why would we have a bunny to keep it outdoors? |
Dogs and cats should be brought inside. Even just a bathroom or mudroom or crate. Chickens can probably be outside if you take proper precautions. We put a lot of extra bedding - clean and dry - in their coop. Extra feed. You need to check on their water because it will freeze - we have to take extra water out to them when that happens. The key is providing a nice warm area and making sure they can stay dry - ie covered from the elements. I can’t speak to rabbits. |
They make these lycra things called slinkies or sleazies and some people call them pajamas. They go under horse blankets and are akin to long underwear. |
| Sled dogs sleep together. Not just one dog. |
My one sled dog sleeps inside. |
I'm the horse pajama PP. My bad, maybe the barn part of the building is not heated. If feels a lot warmer than outside when I go in to groom the horses, but I guess it's the warmth from the animals, plus the warmth from the other half of the building where the humans work and which is definitely heated. |
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Cats?!
I can't imagine my poor sweet kitty being outside in this weather. It actually makes me sad that there are strays stuck in this and you're wondering if it's okay to leave them out???? |
| What about the pair of wild rabbits that live under my porch? |
Really? Are you one of those nut cases who call animal control when your neighbor leaves his husky outside. Is your favorite expression, "if you're cold, they are cold, bring them in?" Many breeds of dogs love the cold and thrive in it. This is their weather and they love it. They prefer to be outside in the cold instead of in a warm house. Husky, Malamute, Saint Bernard, Samoyed, Newfoundland, Bernese Mountain Dog, Great Pyrenees, Tibetan Mastiff, Norwegian Elkhound, Keeshond, Akita, Chow Chow, Anatolian Shepherd, German Shepherd, Swiss Mountain Dog, Kuvasz, Norwegian Elk hound, etc., are all physically built to withstand freezing temps, snow and ice. It's almost cruel to have them inside in the winter. You can't define all dogs with one blanket statement and you obviously know nothing about dogs or likely cats either who also do quite well in the cold when they have to. Many indoor/outdoor cats will choose to stay outside in the cold for long periods of time. Educate yourself before calling anyone a horrible human. |
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We have a property with acreage and an outdoor pen about the perimeter of the main house, with a $1K Home Depot hard shell shed inside.
After a really cute experience with a service that tied goats around the property at the edge of the woods and ate all the poison Ivy, I had planned to get goats and own them. 2015 January snowfall collapsed the roof of the shed and buried the entire fence so you couldn’t see it anymore That was when I realized I was way out of my league, now it’s just all overgrown in there because it turned out a standard riding lawnmower can’t get in the gate, either. Oh well |
They should be brought in. So tired of neighbors with outside cars. They constantly posts cats are lost when they found new homes with owners who will feed and care for them. They expect others to do the hard work and expense. |
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Horse barns have isolated heated areas for the winter indoor riders and viewers. Lots of parents of young riders often also bring along younger siblings for the duration of winter lessons.
There is no heat for the areas with the stalls because of the fire risk. All the hay and wood is a recipe for disaster. Interestingly, they do often have night lighting and places will keep a radio on to make the horses feel like they have “company” Horses can’t actually be stalled together but they also get crazy squirrely when kept regularly in dark and isolation. Horses seasonally wear heavy winter blankets. We have gone through so many of them as all horses are different sizes. We just donated them to the local farm shelter as we went through them. |
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I keep an elderly cat in an outdoor building with no heat because she gets bullied severely in the main house. She’s like 19 now but still comes out every day.
I gave her an insulated box of the kind that we used to get with one of those meat subscriptions, cut out a door and put blankets and rotate old clothes inside like hoodies with zippers broken etc. (this was a question asked recently here) Then when I got a much larger box I cut a door in that and covered the 1st box. She has a warm place to be, plus even though the building isn’t heated, it’s safe from wind and weather. Just cold. She’s hanging in there, still very excited to get her wet food every day since she’s losing her taste for chewing dry food. |
There’s a show called The Last Alaskans (?) where they document the last families who have permission to live in the northernmost regions of Alaskan Wilderness preserves. Even the people who have sled dogs give them all individual, well-built outdoor shelters where they can retreat every night. I forget whether or not they are able to den up in multiples while still chained on their lines but it seems logical that they would have that opportunity. That’s natural dog behavior if they get along. |