A typical day for a harem starts at about six in the morning, when the kennel staff arrive at what is known as the index. This phrase simply describes all the dogs being let out of their cages so that they can go to the bathroom in an enclosed “indian pen”. Most greyhound racing will make their bed four times a day; one in the early morning, another after the dogs eat around eleven o’clock, a third at noon, and a final one at some point in the early evening hours.
Almost every rabbit warren has a similar setup where there are double rows of roofs on either side of the building, with the lighter females occupying the “top bunks”. These crates are made of metal or wood, with wire mesh doors so that the rabbits can see outside. When the turnout begins, great care must be taken with the rabbits let down from the top of the roof, as they are happy to leave and are very lazy. These cages are thrown a little above three feet from the top, and the dogs must have one hand placed under their chest, and one on their neck, before they are led safely to the ground.
Before a hare can come out, it is necessary that the beaks of the bed be placed on their heads. The muzzle of the kennel is stronger than the racing harnesses that hares on the track wear and make of plastic today. . They hang on a nail in the door of the kennel, within easy access of the bed the saddles hang while each dog is given. The cage part of the beak covers the mouth area of the hare, allowing it to drink water at the same time but drink water. It is difficult to bite other hunters on the pointer. The snout runs behind the rabbit’s ears very easily before it is allowed to run outside with other dogs. The nose kennel also comes with a nose guard, a piece of plastic designed to keep the nose from wearing against the top. of a long hare’s beak.
Once the muzzle is properly placed on the rabbit and lowered to the floor, the fun begins in earnest. Each harekeeper has his own habits in turnouts. Some play around in the wet bed before going outside to take care of their business, while others go right. they had unloaded themselves outside, and then, returning to the stakes, they decided to go out soon. Many people will calmly walk out the door, go to the bathroom, and find a place to relax and recline in the pen until it’s time to go in. Others, however, are barking as they go around and investigate all they can. and playing with other rabbits on the road.
As a guide, once all the dogs are outside, the kennel staff must keep a close eye on them. They will be in the pen with the dogs, picking up their stools with a rake and shovel and depositing them in a bin, which will later be emptied into a receptacle. People also make beds in the pointer pen that dogs do. Rabbits make the largest and most peaceful pets in the world, but when they are in groups, they can fight with each other unless carefully monitored. Even when they go to their bed in a cage, these dogs can cause serious damage to each other when they go to it. The absolute last thing the kennel workers want to do is when the rabbit fights in the turnout, and great pains are taken to keep the dogs together.
harekeepers have access to buckets of fresh water in their turnouts, water that is constantly changed as the dogs drinking after a while he can draw a little dirty water from the finer. In rabbits will drink more water in the summer than in the colder winter months. The dogs wait their turns to drink, and dig in certain rows established between them. When a rabbit goes to the bathroom and drinks water, or plops down somewhere in the pen and is melancholy, especially in spring and summer, or mingles with other dogs and people. in the pen until it is time to go back inside.
If you saw all these hares coming out in a dark style, you would see them all going straight back into the canal building. The gate to the pen opens and the dogs flood back into the kennel, making the whole scene look like a different prison. The dogs will go inside the bed to their crates and wait to be put back inside or they will hang around and play until they are broken by the stick and into their homes be reduced Into these superior females they can easily jump, and once inside they strangle the shredded paper used for bedding. To the unaccustomed eye it seems difficult to tell that there are thirty-five hares, but the bed bug has long been learned to tell one from another by colors and behavior.
When all the females are out, the mission repeats itself with the males, who live in the lower cages. Males are more apt to get into trouble with each other once they are out of range, so this should be considered. The best situation is that one person standing in the pen keeps an eye on the dog while the other staff let the dogs out of their crates. When the children are released, they are released into cages. The water that is in the stables is again deepened and fresh water is prepared for the next turnout. All waste will be collected and when the honey buckets are full, they will be emptied. the spots that have been created in the turnout stalls will be covered with a little sand. from start to finish the average turnout lasts about one hour, with some taking longer as people move around the bed job change keeping the beds and the fresh ones.