Adopt

My name is Snowball!

Posted over 3 weeks ago

Adoption process
1

Submit Application

2

Meet the Pet

3

Sign Adoption Contract

4

Pay Fee

5

Take the Pet Home

My basic info

Species
Guinea Pig
Color
White
Age
4 years 5 months old, Adult
Sex
Female
Pet ID
ps_2241658-1875228
Hair Length

My story

Here's what the humans have to say about me:

Meet Daisy and Snowball, American Guinea Pigs at Gainesville Rabbit Rescue. They are not sisters but both born Jul 2020 and are bonded. Their adoption fee is $80.00. 


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Rescue

Contact info

Pet ID
ps_2241658-1875228
Contact
Kathy Finelli
Address
Williston, FL 32696
Donation

Their adoption process

1.

Submit Application

2.

Meet the Pet

3.

Sign Adoption Contract

4.

Pay Fee

5.

Take the Pet Home

Additional adoption info

An adoption application is required and GRR screens all adopting families prior to adoption approval.
Individual rabbits have an adoption fee of $125.00, and bonded pairs have a fee of $230.00.
[Adoption fees cover the spay/neuter surgery, micro-chip, and vaccines performed prior to adoption.]

Adoption application

Go meet their pets

Most of our rabbits are in the loving care of foster families, so meetings to view the rabbits can be scheduled by phone or email.
GRR is also found every Sunday of the month at the Petsmart located on Archer Road in Gainesville, FL.

More about this rescue

We are a nonprofit organization accepting into its protection any rabbit that has been mistreated or abandoned. The organization does not deny shelter because of disability or illness. All rabbits, after being nursed into optimum health by knowledgeable volunteers and—when necessary—local vets, are spayed and neutered before being placed up for adoption. GRR volunteers screen all adopting families to insure these rabbits will be placed in a secure and loving home.
Gainesville Rabbit Rescue, Inc. is not a shelter; it is solely reliant upon the efforts of its volunteers and foster homes. We strive to place our rescued rabbits in the loving homes of foster families who see to it that the rabbits are litter box trained, fed and well cared for, with expenses coming more often than not from their own pockets.
Domestic rabbits are less able to save themselves than other companion animals. Classified as both pets and livestock, they are farmed, experimented on, eaten, worn, made into lucky charms; and some are kept as companions. Unfortunately, like other companion animals, they are also discarded by irresponsible owners. Thousands of rabbits are euthanized at animal shelters each year and we work hard to ensure the rabbits in our area do not fall victim to that fate.

Other pets at this rescue