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RABBIT

Swedes flock to rent rabbits over summer

Renting an animal over the summer is becoming all the more popular in Sweden, with kids favouring rabbits while pensioners opt to foster hens.

Swedes flock to rent rabbits over summer
Jannes Pockele/Flickr

Farms which offer bunnies for rent are popping up like rabbits across Sweden.

"I’ve been doing this for ten years, but in the beginning there were maybe only ten families interested," Kristina Karlsson from Gangvide Farm on Gotland told The Local.

"Now there are between 40 and 70 families each year who want to try it out. Interest is huge, particularly among families in the city and those who want to test for allergies."

Karlsson said it all started with a friend who asked to rent one of her rabbits – and she hopped immediately on board.

"Renting is great because people can try it out before they commit. Sometimes people plan on having a rabbit for three weeks or a month, and come back after just four days. Maybe the kids have lost interest."

Rental rabbits are available anywhere from one day to an entire summer, with two or three weeks being the standard. While Gangvide Farm doesn't do much marketing for their rabbits, other farms and breeders across Sweden do. Färnsa 4H Ranch in Norrtälje has listed their animals on Swedish buy-sell sites. The Blocket bunnies can be rented for 70 kronor ($10.60) a day or 900 ($136) for a month. Ninas Rabbit Shop near Kalmar even has a waiting list – baby bunny Shabby Chic Heaven won't be available until August. 

Rental pets are also increasing in popularity with pensioners – though generally they prefer chickens.

"I think hens remind many older people of their childhood," Karlsson speculated. "There are also places on Gotland where you can’t have rabbits due to diseases, and then chickens or ducks are better."

Customers can choose which chickens they would like to rent, and ducks are available as well.

"It’s actually more fun to have baby chickens and ducks than rabbits," Karlsson laughed. "They’re active all day long, while rabbits just sit there and eat."

Solveig Rundquist
Follow Solveig on Twitter.

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ZOO

Top ten incredibly bizarre Danish stories from 2015

From dissecting lions in front of children to death by potato, Danes have proved in 2015 that they are still capable of making the bizarre look banal.

Top ten incredibly bizarre Danish stories from 2015
Photos: Scanpix/Tambako The Jaguar/Flickr

In no particular order, we take a look at ten of the strangest stories to emerge from the Scandinavian nation this year. Animals and sex make a surprisingly high number of appearances – sometimes, both at the same time.

1. Sexy ad tells Danes to ‘do it for Mom!

An advert for tourism firm Spies Travel went viral in September after it showed mothers removing their sons’ girlfriends’ bras, so desperate were they for grandchildren. A less awkward solution might be for the would-be grannies to send their children on holiday, the ad makers said.

2. Danish zoo kids watch lion dissection

After the furore surrounding Copenhagen Zoo’s public giraffe autopsy in 2014, Odense decided to go one better by slicing up a lion. In front of a crowd of schoolchildren.

3. Danes and Swedes at odds over racist plasters

The historic rivalry between Denmark and Sweden took a farcical turn in August after Denmark only labelled pink plasters or band-aids ‘flesh-coloured’.

Eventually the row was resolved when Danish foreign minister Kristian Jensen apologized for making comments mocking Sweden on Facebook. At least they have something they can use to heal the wounds…

4. Denmark’s most WTF NSFW campaign poster

A prime ministerial hopeful that bares all on his campaign posters? Let’s hope Donald Trump never visits Denmark.

5. Denmark considers adding porn to school curriculum

In a story worryingly reminiscent of a scene from a Monty Python film, a Danish professor suggested using pornographic films as part of schools’ sex education programs, saying that it beat having to “roll a condom onto a cucumber.” Less surprisingly, the story also revealed that 99 per cent of teenage boys in Scandinavia have seen porn.

6. Man jailed for killing his brother with potatoes

A northern Jutland man died when a drunken brawl ended with his brother stuffing potatoes into his mouth, choking him.

7. Radio hosts kill baby rabbit on air


Not Allan. Photo: Ian McKellar/Flickr

In an effort to highlight poor animal welfare in the agricultural sector, Radio24syv host Asger Juhl killed a baby rabbit, Allan, live on air.

“I hit it hard over the neck twice so that the cervical vertebrae fractured,” said Juhl, sounding more serial killer than disc jockey.

8. Dane commits ‘genitalia vandalism’ in IKEA

Most of us can relate to the pain of a Saturday visit to IKEA. A man from Aalborg struck a blow for immature flat-pack haters everywhere by taking a complimentary pencil and proceeding to draw small penises all over his local store.

9. Russia rehearses invasion of Denmark


Russian President Vladimir Putin. Photo: Grigory Dukor/Scanpix

More than just Putin posturing: a US report revealed in June that 33,000 Russian soldiers took part in a military exercise which rehearsed a takeover of Danish island Bornholm, as well as parts of Finland, Sweden and Norway.

The Russians have, in fact, briefly occupied Bornholm before – it was liberated by the Red Army at the end of World War II.

10. Vice shines light on bestiality in Denmark

“They’ve got animal sex on their brains. That’s their whole life, they love it,” says Peter Sandøe of the Danish Ethical Council for Animals in a Vice documentary that shines light on bestiality in Denmark, one of the few countries where zoophilia is legal.