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Choose one room to let your rabbit roam around freely in. This room needs to meet all your rabbit’s needs, so it needs a litter box, a hay feeder, food dishes, and water bowl. Inside the room, you can set up cardboard houses, bunny condos, puppy pens, or rabbit cages. One of a rabbit’s favorite activities is chewing. In the bunny room, cover up wires or remove them completely. You can place electrical cords in hard plastic tubing split lengthwise with the cords tucked inside. Place cords behind woodwork or trim, wrap them in spiral wrap or use concealers to keep them out of sight. Since your rabbit will love to chew, she will chew on trim, door edges, furniture, wallpaper, sheetrock, and carpet if you let her. Protect the room by putting boards over places your bunny can chew that she shouldn’t.  To keep your rabbit from burrowing up into the furniture, put cardboard or 2x4s under it. Cover the wall with clear plastic panels to keep the rabbit from chewing. To discourage your rabbit from chewing on inappropriate objects, give her an acceptable chewing toy if she tries to chew on something else. Make sure your rabbit has a lot of toys and objects to chew on. You can leave out alfalfa cubes, cardboard tubes stuffed with grass hay, fresh apple, willow, or aspen branches, or rolled up cotton towels. You can make homemade toys for your rabbit, like a cardboard box stuffed with hay, cardboard rolls from paper towels, gift wrap, or toilet paper, or multiple cardboard boxes lined up to make a rabbit tunnel. You can also stuff a paper sack with shredded newspaper (and a few treats) to give your rabbit a digging adventure.
Let your rabbit roam in a designated room. Protect electrical wiring. Keep your rabbit from chewing on trim and furniture. Give your rabbit toys to chew on.