English Spot Rabbit
The English Spot Rabbit is a breed of domestic rabbit that was developed in England in the 19th century through selective breeding. The English Spot is a medium-sized breed that weighs 5 to 8 pounds on average. It is distinguished by its body patterns, which include a butterfly-shaped snout, eye circles, cheek spots, herringbone, colored ears, and a chain of spots. The English Spot has flyback fur. Seven distinct variants of the breed exist, including black, blue, chocolate, lilac, tortoise, gray, and gold. English Spots have full arches in their bodies and long front legs that enable them to stand up from a table.
The lively English Spot needs a couple of hours per day to run around. They sleep during the day and are most active in the morning and at night. The English Spot is judged while it runs the length of a table because of its arched body type, which enables the animal's body type to be thoroughly evaluated. An active lifestyle is accompanied by a voracious hunger. Like most rabbits, an English Spot rabbit's diet mostly consists of hay, a roughage that lowers the risk of blockages and malocclusion while supplying the indigestible fiber required to keep the digestive tract working.