Gwen's hopping
mad about rabbits
08/04/2002
Lucia Charnock
If Gwen Butler's dream ever became a reality, she would be
out of a job. For the saviour of hundreds of rabbits,
guinea pigs and a whole host of other small animals wants
people across the North-East and North Yorkshire to realise
that a rabbit is not just for Easter.
But for Gwen, teaching people how to properly care for
their hopping pets, is not just a job, it is a vocation.
It is more than five years since TV vet Mark Evans filmed
Gwen volunteering at the RSPCA centre at Great Ayton and
gave her the idea of converting her home into a sanctuary
for unwanted rabbits. Since then, Bunny Burrows has grown
quicker than the population of rabbits in a field.
Gwen, 55, was born and brought up in Richmond and has never
lived anywhere else. Her parents were happy to abide by her
request that they provided her with pets rather than baby
brothers and sisters.
She says she was bullied at school but her work at the
rabbit sanctuary has given her happiness, confidence and a
sense of purpose.
"I love it when people ask me about rabbits and want to
learn. Rabbits aren't animals which should be shut up in a
hutch at the bottom of the garden - they are intelligent
and have feelings and characters."
But it takes real passion, vocation and dedication to allow
furry friends to hop all over your house, eat all the grass
in your garden and take over your entire life, as they have
done with Gwen.
A housing estate on the edge of Richmond may be an unlikely
place to find a bunny haven but Gwen's house - which she
shares with her patient husband John, as well as the
menagerie of animals - is easy to spot.
The front garden is full of stone models of rabbits and
there is a dainty sign welcoming the unsuspecting visitor
to Bunny Burrows. A polite notice asks visitors to close
the gate as there are animals running freely around.
But it is only as you go through Gwen's garage and into her
back garden that the true enormity of just what she has
chosen to take on becomes apparent.
There are guinea pigs and rabbits in cages all over the
garage while there are more rabbits in a further two sheds,
a few more in outdoor runs and two rabbits hopping freely
around the back garden.
There is room for about 20 animals in a shed, the garage
and hutches in the garden. Gwen has another four rabbits of
her own in another shed, a further six rabbits which live
in the house plus Thora, a very sick rabbit. The spare room
is home to another two rabbits and six guinea pigs.
Hopping around the garden is Paris, the largest, fattest,
rabbit imaginable, (after Tullulah, which needed a tummy
tuck and Faberge, which went on a sponsored slim) and Gwen
delights in revealing that she made rabbit history. When
Bunny Burrows paid to have her speyed by the country's
leading rabbit vet in Harrogate and her uterus was removed,
it weighed five pounds.
While Paris might be at the top end of the scale, Bunny
Burrows' vet bill still amounts to some £800 a month - the
sanctuary pays for the animals to be neutered and picks up
all other medical bills, which can be costly for the
charity.
"I don't worry about the money. I believe if what I am
doing is right, the money will be there and it always is,"
says Gwen philosophically.
The animals come to Bunny Burrows for a variety of reasons
- owners discover they are allergic to their pets or have a
change in circumstances which means they can no longer look
after them. Some of the animals have been abused or
neglected or have illnesses which mean they need extra
care.
And on top of the day to day responsibility of caring for
dozens of pets, Gwen also goes to schools, youth groups and
community organisations to talk about Bunny Burrows and to
advise people on how to look after their rabbits.
So far this year, Bunny Burrows has rehomed 60 rabbits and
50 guinea pigs. None are sold in the true sense of the word
but all new owners are asked to make a contribution to the
sanctuary, which relies completely on donations.
"I believe people come here to find a companion for another
pet. If they just wanted a rabbit or a guinea pig they
would go to a pet shop and just buy a cutie baby animal,"
said Gwen.
Gwen is the first to admit that she could not do it alone
and she has an army of helpers, volunteers and friends who
are happy to lend their hutches and gardens to Bunny
Burrows by fostering some of the animals.
Most of them started off with just one rabbit and one
guinea pig but Gwen's infectious enthusiasm and passion for
pets rubs off and more and more volunteers are providing
more and more foster homes for Bunny Burrows pets.
And Gwen does not intend to quit. "So long as I am fit and
able, and have the help and support, I will continue to do
this. The rabbits are my babies and they are all very
special. I love them all to bits."
For further information about Bunny Burrows, call 01748
824788.
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