I've never been one for pet shops or breeders so after convincing Ian to get a bunny, the first…read morestep was finding the animal shelter. Actually- the step before that was finding the word for animal shelter. Ah, "Tierheim". We're off.
The place is out there - about an hour to get to by public transport. But it is so worth it!
The Tierheim itself is pristine. A hexagonal cement structure, everything was clearly marked with a pond and the dog section in the center. Parts of Aeon Flux were even filmed here/
We entered the "Bugs Bunny" section with the rabbits. We entered a long hallway with the right side taken up by rabbits behind glass. Some were brown, some were gray, some were black, some were large, some were itsy bitsy. Nervously we surveyed the scene. Would there be a test or something?
After being ignored for 20 min (typical German customer service) we practically jumped on the first official. She explained the process, we paid 20 euro, and then it was time to pick a bunny. "What should we look for?" Ian asked. "Dunno. A cute one?" This was a tough order, because in case you didn't know, bunnies are crazy adorable. We picked basically at random, a tiny brown male. "He hasn't been castrated yet. You could come back on Friday."
Oh. Yeah. You're cute little guy, but we are not making this trek again. Once again we walked the hall, considering an enormous spotted female named Ruth, a gray male named Boris, and a white and brown spotted guy named Hugo. For no obvious reason, we picked Hugo and re-named him Herr Schmidt.
This is undoubtedly the most beautiful animal shelter I've ever seen and I highly recommend a visit just to check it out. Along with adopting out pets, there are care facilities, an old age area (!), and a pet cemetery. Go, volunteer, donate and adopt.