Ebay Bunny Rabbit

Link

Rear Admiral
Joined
Apr 13, 2003
Messages
4,221
Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

Sorry RP I thought everyone had heard of the scam.<br />Some guy took some pictures of a bunny and said if he didnt recieve 20K or something like that he was going to have to kill and eat it..
 

IBFishing

Seaman
Joined
May 7, 2005
Messages
64
Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

geez....some people will try anything :rolleyes: <br /><br />Whoever thought of holding a rabbit hostage!!<br /><br />Although....if it works, I'll have to get my camera out! :D <br /><br />Anyone willing to pay me 20k to save a rabbit (heck, I'll even take 10k)? :D
 

Reel Poor

Vice Admiral
Joined
Jan 29, 2005
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5,522
Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

Ahh...I did hear about that but had forgotten about it.<br /><br />Now I wonder too???
 

brother chris

Commander
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Jul 28, 2002
Messages
2,063
Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

I remember that. I think I posted the link to the site...I think.<br />Now I can't remember what site it was. BRB with an answer...hopefully.
 

Bob_VT

Moderator & Unofficial iBoats Historian
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Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

Reminds me of the recent article in our local Rutland Herald: <br /><br /> Increased demand for rabbit meat prompts shortage <br /><br />August 8, 2005 <br /><br />By J.M. HIRSCH The Associated Press <br /> <br />WEST HAVEN — Talk about culinary irony — rabbit meat is in short supply.<br /><br />Despite the critters' proclivity to reproduce, demand for rabbit meat has surged in recent years and breeders are struggling to supply the many trendy restaurants adding it to their menus.<br /><br />"We could easily be doing 1,000 a week. The demand is there," says Langis Anctil, whose Champlain Valley Rabbitry farm in West Haven is working full tilt to raise that many bunnies a month.<br /><br />Of course, it's not that rabbits don't reproduce fast enough — it's just an 11-week cycle from birth to broiler. The problem is that there aren't enough producers.<br /><br />It's just a $10 million industry — stitched mostly from a patchwork of small farms and hobbyists — so small the government barely tracks it.<br /><br />For restaurants such as Minibar, a posh tapas-style eatery in Los Angeles that offered a popular rabbit sausage since opening nearly two years ago, this has meant serious supply problems.<br /><br />"We would find a purveyor with the product at the right price, but then they'd run out and we'd find another and then they would run out, and that's what it's been like for about eight months," says owner Ravel Centeno-Rodrigues.<br /><br />"Finally, we took it off the menu."<br /><br />The number of producers has been in a steady decline since rabbit's heyday about 60 years ago. That's when a wartime meat shortage led the federal government to urge people to switch to rabbit, making it a common offering in grocers' meat cases. But as the supply of red meat and chicken improved, rabbit fell from favor.<br /><br />Rabbit meat industry insiders blame its decline for so many years on an undeserved bad rap. Though farm-raised rabbit tastes like — surprise! — tender chicken, it has a reputation as a tough and gamey meat (likely because wild rabbit generally is).<br /><br />The Easter Bunny syndrome — a reluctance by many Americans to eat animals that are cute and fuzzy — hasn't helped, either, according to Pat Lamar, president of the Professional Rabbit Meat Association.<br /><br />But it seems the bad reputation is fading and fuzzy is becoming fabulous. Today, rabbit is in restaurants from Los Angeles to Portland, Maine.<br /><br />In 2004, the United States imported more than 1 million pounds of rabbit meat — mostly from China — a near doubling from the year before, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.<br /><br />Much of that is ending up in specialty shops and restaurants, which have begun serving rabbit in everything from North African tagines and mixed grill to smoked sausages and salads.<br /><br />"Rabbit probably at one point was more risque than offal (innards)," says Shea Gallante, chef at Cru, an upscale Mediterranean restaurant in New York that offers rabbit sausage with gnocchi.<br /><br />"Nowadays it's so common people think, 'Do I have the rabbit appetizer or do I have the calf's heart?"'<br /><br />Kate Krader, a senior editor at Food & Wine magazine, sees rabbit on menus everywhere and attributes the renewed interest to the growth in bistro-style restaurants, which focus on rustic fare, including wild game.<br /><br />What's impressive about the growth is that unlike beef and pork, there is no marketing effort behind it, she said.<br /><br />Part of the appeal is health. Rabbit is low in fat and cholesterol and high in protein. Americans also are traveling more widely and encountering rabbit on European menus, especially in France and Italy. And American chefs are ever on the watch for new tastes and textures.<br /><br />As rabbit becomes more common in U.S. restaurants, Krader thinks it's likely to show up in more grocers, many of which already offer such exotics as ostrich and buffalo meat.<br /><br />Rabbit now is common in specialty food shops in large cities, and is creeping into mainstream grocers. Publix supermarkets offers rabbit at 250 of its 800 stores in the Southeast.<br /><br />The meat has not fared as well in the grocers in the Northeast, however, where poor sales recently prompted Hannaford Bros. Co. to pull it from the shelves of its 146 stores after five months.<br /><br />Such setbacks haven't slowed the industry much. At Pel-Freez, the nation's largest rabbit meat processor, work once slowed to part time much of the year. Now it is all the Rogers, Ark., company can do to keep pace.<br /><br />The hodgepodge nature of the industry complicates that. Because so many rabbit breeders are small-time farmers who go in and out of the business, companies such as Pel-Freez must constantly look for new suppliers.<br /><br />It also isn't easy on the breeding end. Rabbits can have high mortality rates and a dearth of processors means many breeders must rely on so-called bunny runners to transport the animals to slaughter, sometimes many states away.<br /><br />Anctil gets around that by processing his own rabbits — snapping their necks, skinning and gutting them. Despite a steady stream of chefs and culinary students visiting his remote farm, he seems surprised by his success.<br /><br />He only regrets that he can't keep the rabbits on his farm a bit longer, fattening them up a bit more. He slaughters them when they reach 2-3/4 or 3 pounds. The market just won't wait longer.<br /><br />"They move so fast we don't have time to get them bigger," he says
 

Ron G

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Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

I love fryed rabbit for breakfast with fryed taters sawmeal gravy and homemade bisquits :D :Di done made myself hungry. :)
 

roscoe

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Oct 30, 2002
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21,708
Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

http://www.savetoby.com/ <br /><br />And there have been others.<br /><br />If I remember, Toby was to be cooked in June of 2005, now it is November of 2006. So he must be making so bucks off of this or he would have eaten him.
 

Link

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Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

Originally posted by roscoe:<br /> http://www.savetoby.com/ <br /><br />And there have been others.<br /><br />If I remember, Toby was to be cooked in June of 2005, now it is November of 2006. So he must be making so bucks off of this or he would have eaten him.
roscoe you da man, yup how could I of forgotten Tobys name. poor little wabbit. Now he needs to sell X number of books on "Save Toby" ROFLOL<br />Well Toby made it past June I expect (if he is even real) will live through the next deadline.. should I use that word (deadline) out of respect for poor Tobys fate?? :D :D :D
 

Link

Rear Admiral
Joined
Apr 13, 2003
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Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

What a Hoot QC! <br />That was funny... also went through the rest of his website! Wish Id of come up with that idea! <br /> :D :D :D
 

QC

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Mar 22, 2005
Messages
22,783
Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

I'm still laughing just thinking about it. The rest of the site is pretty good too like you said. Did you see the hand scrawled note from the little girl? Too much . . .
 

brother chris

Commander
Joined
Jul 28, 2002
Messages
2,063
Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

Yeah, that was it, Toby.<br /><br />Well, apparently Toby's exacution date has been postponed up until Nov 6/ 2006. <br />Whew...I thought he was a goner :D
 

Nos4r2

Lieutenant Commander
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Dec 12, 2004
Messages
1,533
Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

I think I could do a site like that with my housemate-If I don't receive £1 million I'll let him live....
 

Reel Poor

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Joined
Jan 29, 2005
Messages
5,522
Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

Originally posted by Nos4r2:<br /> I think I could do a site like that with my housemate-If I don't receive £1 million I'll let him live....
Nos <br /> :rolleyes: <br />I dont feel threatened at all. Even if you dont receive the money, he still lives with YOU. :D <br />And thats in the UK. ;)
 

KRS

Banned
Joined
May 15, 2004
Messages
2,383
Re: Ebay Bunny Rabbit

Originally posted by ZmOz:<br />
Originally posted by Link:<br />he was going to have to kill and eat it..
Isn't that called farming? :confused:
I think it's better known as ranching.<br /><br />Ranching bunnies.<br /><br />Bunny ranching.<br /><br />Bunny Ranch...... ;) <br /><br />sounds like a Nevada Brothel?! :eek: :D :eek: :D
 
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