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International News


BUNNY BLISS. A rabbit enjoys its playtime at the Bunny Style Hotel in Hong Kong on January 18, 2023. With the lifting of COVID restrictions, Hong Kongers are travelling again and some of those who keep rabbits as pets are booking them into a rabbit resort where they are fed, exercised, and pampered with spa treatments. The Lunar New Year of the Rabbit is shining a particular spotlight on the popularity of the animals in the crowded city of tiny apartments. (AP Photo/Anthony Kwan)

BUNNY BLISS. Co-founder Donna Li makes a rabbit grass cake at the Bunny Style Hotel in Hong Kong on January 18, 2023. (AP Photo/Anthony Kwan)

LEISURELY LAGOMORPHS. A staff member feeds a rabbit at the Bunny Style Hotel in Hong Kong on January 18, 2023. In one of the world’s most densely populated cities, where most apartments range from small to miniscule, rabbits are popular pets. And when their owners are away, there are rabbit lovers ready to look after their lonely pets at Bunny Style, a luxury rabbit resort. In addition to feeding, hair-brushing, nail trimming, and exercising, some owners also order special vegetable cakes for their pets. (AP Photo/Anthony Kwan)

LEISURELY LAGOMORPHS. A staff member cleans the play area at the Bunny Style Hotel in Hong Kong on January 18, 2023. (AP Photo/Anthony Kwan)

From The Asian Reporter, V33, #2 (February 6, 2023), pages 1, 2 & 7.

Hong Kong pet rabbits enjoy bunny resort while owners away

By Alice Fung and Karmen Li

The Associated Press

HONG KONG — Rabbits scamper around a play area in a climate-controlled building in suburban Hong Kong, some climbing a castle made of wood while others explore a cotton tunnel.

In one of the world’s most densely populated cities, where most apartments range from small to miniscule, rabbits are popular pets.

And when their owners are away, there are rabbit lovers ready to look after their lonely pets at Bunny Style, a luxury rabbit resort.

That was especially evident last month as the lifting of COVID-19 restrictions in Hong Kong spurred a surge in travel for the Lunar New Year to welcome the Year of the Rabbit.

Donna Li, the owner of Bunny Style, had said she was fully booked for the holiday and kept her charges happy with regular exercise, parties, spa treatments, and lots of hay.

"We aim to provide a secure environment," Li said.

Li, who has two pet rabbits of her own, set up Bunny Style in June, starting with just a playroom offering space to hop and relief from Hong Kong’s hot, humid weather.

"To begin with, my idea was mainly about setting up a safe indoor play space with a suitable temperature for rabbits," Li said.

As the government began lifting COVID-19 restrictions in September, Li sensed a need and swiftly set up boarding facilities. They were full over Christmas and Li has already begun taking bookings for Easter.

With 15 rabbits, Li and her staff were busy over the Lunar New Year holiday, the most important in the Chinese calendar. Apart from feeding — some owners order special vegetable cakes in advance — there are hair-brushing, nail trimming, and exercising to be managed.

"I think rabbits understand what people say. They can sense whether we are being nice to them and look after them well," Li said. "And so when I look after them, I talk to them a lot, telling them how beautiful and cute they are."

A livestream and video clips are also provided, "so we knew that our rabbit was out actively hopping and enjoying itself," said Rainbow Li, who found Bunny Style on the internet and boarded her rabbit while she and her partner travelled over Christmas.

Bunny Style charges about $15 per night, including half an hour of supervised play time. Beauty treatments and special menu items are extra.

The animals’ popularity in Hong Kong has inevitably led to some owners finding they’ve bit off more than they can chew. For that, there are shelters such as Tolobunny, set up in 2015 and dedicated to finding new homes for abandoned rabbits, often at public adoption events.

Spokesperson Bridget Ng is already anticipating a surge of calls to the shelter’s 24-hour rescue hotline in the months after the new year. Already, its volunteers are temporarily housing 42 rabbits given up by their owners.

"Our observation is that throughout the year, especially at festive holidays like Valentine’s Day, Easter, or Christmas, there are more people who want to keep rabbits, but after a few months, there will be more abandoned rabbits," Ng said.

Homeless dogs and cats still get more care, but "I hope there will be more attention and resources for all kinds of abandoned animals," founder Winky Cheng said.

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