Angora Rabbits My New Obsession!

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Angora Rabbits My New Obsession

I admit I have a problem. It’s Angora Rabbits! Over the winter me and hubs decided we would add some more animals to our little homestead. He wants the small chickens like he used to have and show when he was a kid. I on the other hand want to get an animal that I can harvest the wool for my knitted projects. He said no to getting Alpaca’s. Darn they are so cute!

So I had to think of something a little smaller. Angora Rabbits! I had three Beautiful English Angora Rabbits years ago that had Blue eyes which at the time was very rare.  I harvested their wool that they shed for a summer which was a tub full of zip lock bags of Amazingly soft wool to be spun up and made into yarn.

We were still raising crickets at the time, so I really had little time to invest in my Angora Rabbit hobby, I ended up giving the rabbits to my neighbor kid who was going to learn to knit and spin for 4-H. I still had those bags full of the fiber, in the top of my closet for several years until this past winter. I got the guts to try and spin some of it on my old Antique Spinning wheel.

I was told by many people that it was hard to spin rabbit fiber so I never tried, even sold all most of my spinning things when times got tough, after we quit the cricket biz. But I kept the old antique wheel because I bought it while we were traveling in our RV one summer in a little cowboy town in Wyoming. Trips together were rare back in those days. It was a sentimental thing and I really loved spinning and wanted to pick it back up someday.

Anyway back to the story.

Reasons I picked Angora Rabbits as my fiber animal

  • They are small, I can have many!
  • They won’t destroy the yard or the trees.
  • Their wool is 7 times warmer than any wool and softer than cashmere.
  • I can use the rabbit poo in my compost to make really nice dirt for my garden. (We have very poor dirt here).
  • I can raise them outside in a shed or small barn.
  • I don’t have to hire someone to come shear the wool twice a year.
  • I have the time to take care of them and groom them each week.
  • One rabbit will produce enough fiber each year to make a whole sweater.
  • There hair molts like a long hair dog, 4 times a year, that’s when you harvest the wool from them.
  • I can sell some of the wool as it is a luxury fiber and you can get $20 for a bag of their hair. Nice!
  • I won’t have to wash the wool first, it comes off the rabbit ready to spin.
  • They are super cute!
  • Last one thing, I could use them as meat rabbits…(Nope! Now if the zombies attached and I have too, then I’m sure I could, maybe…No, I would raise more chickens to eat.)

Now that I picked my fiber animal it was time to go looking for one. I was on facebook and saw that a girl wanted to sell an angora rabbit on one of the farm animal groups I had been watching for silkie chickens last year. She only wanted $20 for it. SCORE!

I bought my first Angora Rabbit. Now off to do more research!

I joined another group on Facebook that was just about Angora Rabbits and they told me about a spinning group to join. I quickly joined that because I wanted to learn how to spin up all those bags of lushious wool I had saved up for all those years. That lead me back to the lady I first bought my rabbits from, she even fixed my spinning wheel for me all those years ago. Turns out she was the one that started a new variety of Angora Rabbits to have blue eyes. I really had no idea how famous she was at the time and now she has found me again. Must be a sign! You can read her blog here if your interested in finding out more about the Angora Rabbit, she has a wealth of information on Candy’s blog.

Angora Rabbit Wool Spinning project

I ended up spinning all the wool I had saved and it wasn’t hard at all, even when my old spinning wheel would fall apart in the middle of spinning. I got it done, it wasn’t the nicest it could have been, I’m no pro to spinning but it was mine and I knitted it up right away, making a beautiful cowl for my step mom for her birthday.

Angora Rabbit Wool Cowl Project

Now I wanted more rabbits, I talked to Candy about it and she found me several people to by my stock from to start my rabbitry. I’m buying the very best that I can to get started, with pedigrees to see what colors they are from, there seems to be a lot of colors in these Angora Rabbits. Not sure if I’ll ever get the colors straight, but with the help from others I’m sure I’ll learn fast.

BEST INDOOR RABBIT CAGE

I found the Best Indoor Rabbit Cage EVER! I love them so much that I bought two of them! The rabbits love them too! Rusty slides under cubby hole and dig, dig, dig, then he jets out and jumps up on the top for a bite to eat or sleep. I have a litter box in there for him. I just used a cardboard box that I cut down but I’m going to buy this Jumbo Plastic Litter Pan very soon.

Wait…What There’s Another Variety of Angora Rabbits called Satin?!

Then I found out that there was another variety in the Angora Rabbits that I wanted to get and that was the Satin Angora Rabbits. The spinners in my facebook group love to spin this shinny fiber and I had to get one myself. (Rusty in the pictures is a Red Satin Angora Rabbit.) There are a few different types of Angora rabbits, Giant and German Angoras which is a favorite because they produce a lot more wool each year for you, like up to 4 lbs of wool per rabbit. But they are big bunnies weighing up to 11 lbs.

French and Satin Angora Rabbits are a lot alike

French and Satin Angora Rabbits look a lot alike only the Satin Rabbits have a nice shine to them. I have a Chocolate French Rabbit that has more personality than some people I know and my newest member to my herd is a baby Red Satin buck, (Pictured below all laid back) he is super sweet. The Satin Angora Rabbits don’t produce as much fiber as the other Angoras, but they are much easier to take care of and the Satin’s wool is so beautiful and the most wanted wool if I was to sell any, which I won’t, I’ll want to spin it all myself. Just look how cute Rusty is!

Red Satin Angora Rabbit Homesteading for women

The English Angora Rabbits are the favorite, they are super cute and have the most fiber in a small body rabbit. Sometimes you can’t even see their face for all the fur. But you really have to groom them to keep the tangles out of the wool. I’m getting four of them in the next couple of weeks. I’ll be adding to my instagram on the progress of our Bunny Barn. Now I have to think of a name for my Rabbitry. Any ideas?

Michelle 🙂

Angora Rabbits my new obsession




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