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NEWS ARTICLES

An earful on rabbits


By Nick Green
THE DAILY BREEZE (April 19, 2003)

LEARNING RESPONSIBILITY
THE SOFT WAY



SCOTT VARLEY/DAILY BREEZE

During the L.A. Zoo's Big Bunny's Spring Fling, Bona Tucker of Torrance acquaints children with one of the rabbits her PetSave Foundation has rescued. The group has 244 ready for adoption.

PETS: Torrance rescuer strives to educate parents that bunnies are more than a passing seasonal fancy.

Pink foam ears flopping and excited bunny-painted faces smiling, a herd of small children surrounded Torrance's Bona Tucker on Friday as she sat on a hay bale with a large unnamed gray rabbit, its nose perpetually twitching.

Tucker - or more precisely several of her rabbits - shared center stage with the likes of the Energizer Bunny and what the Los Angeles Zoo's relentlessly punny public relations staff billed as other "egg-citing egg-tivities" at the annual "egg-stravaganza" dubbed "Big Bunny's Spring Fling."

The event, which runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. through Sunday, attracts thousands of youngsters to Griffith Park each Easter weekend.

Periodically, a small, tentative hand reached out to gently stroke the soft fur of the rabbit sitting placidly on Tucker's lap.

"Look at these furry feet," cooed former Redondo Beach resident Teri Milio, as she guided the hand of her 20-month-old daughter down the rabbit's back. "You'd think rabbits would be the luckiest animals in the world when they have feet like this."

Tucker, president of rabbit rescue group PetSave Foundation, knows that's not the case.

"If I convince one person to get their rabbit fixed or if I get one adoption or I convince one person not to buy an Easter bunny it's worth it," she said of her weekend at the zoo.

For Tucker, rabbit education is a lot like rabbit reproduction - a seemingly never-ending task.

The rabbit on Tucker's lap was one of about 450 she and her rabbit rescue group helped liberate a year ago from a Mar Vista home where they were kept in squalid conditions by 50-year-old Linda Latshaw.

Latshaw pleaded guilty to misdemeanor animal neglect and was sentenced to three years probation, 100 hours of community service and a $10,000 fine payable to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which seized the animals.

The PetSave Foundation (which received $500 for its ongoing role in caring for the critters) has found homes for 170 of the rabbits.

And Tucker's group has just 244 of the rabbits remaining thankfully neutered or spayed now - that must be adopted.

But Easter brings new challenges - in the form of new rabbits.

"Two to three months prior to Easter we get all the dumps,"
Tucker said. "I hope to God people aren't releasing last year's bunny in anticipation of buying a baby. It's a very disturbing trend."

Tucker estimates she is offered at least one rabbit a day by someone who claims they can no longer care for it. She usually declines the offer.

After all, Tucker ran afoul of Torrance's municipal code last year when someone told code enforcement officers Tucker was breaking the law by keeping about 75 rabbits at her home.

She was - including rabbits from city-owned Madrona Marsh, where staff would call her to rescue unwanted rabbits dumped there.

Fortunately, understanding city officials awarded Tucker a special temporary permit to keep up to 80 rabbits (she's now down to 40).

Not surprisingly, Tucker has little patience for those she views as trying to evade responsibility for a life, even if it is a rabbit's.

During the past five years as a rabbit rescuer, she reckons she has dealt with about 700 bunnies.

Among the people she has to educate are supposed educators, who often keep rabbits in their classroom.

"I get phone calls from teachers who say the mother (rabbit) gave birth and she won't feed the babies," said an exasperated Tucker. "Well, they're not going to nurse when there's a bunch of carnivores watching. And when they ask me 'What am I doing wrong?' I say 'breeding them in the first place.'"

Then there was the teacher who kept a rabbit in a classroom, left it there over the weekend even though the airconditioning invariably shut off and was surprised to come in one Monday morning to find a deceased bunny.

Which is why this Easter weekend, while parents and children are enjoying warm fuzzy feelings from warm fuzzy bunnies, Tucker will tuck in a quick sermon about responsible pet ownership - or hand those who are receptive an educational brochure.

Zoo officials help out, reminding visitors that getting a bunny for Easter is not a passing seasonal fancy - it's a commitment of several years.

So Tucker welcomes the likes of Ginger Tang of Glendale, her 6-year-old daughter Brianna and 3-year-old son Jacob.

Tang said she has had three litter-trained bunnies as pets over the years; now her daughter wants one. Tucker quickly hands her a brochure.

"I knew you can get cats and dogs and stuff like that at shelters, but I didn't know you could get bunnies," exclaims Tang.

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PetSave Foundation
522 W. 9th St.
San Pedro, CA 90731

Tel: 310-833-7333
contact@petsave.org