bunnies everywhere
link

Poor bunny. Via.

link

thedailywhat:

Bunday Surprise of the Day: From The Mainichi Daily News comes a report that Okunoshima Island, home to the infamous Imperial Army’s lethal gas production facilities from 1929 to 1945, is now a place of refuge for hundreds of adorable bunnies.

Many visitors to Okunoshima Island, located some three kilometers off the Hiroshima Prefectural city of Takehara, are bringing their cameras to take photographs of the rabbits, next year’s zodiac animal, for their New Year’s greeting cards and personal blog sites. Today, there are some 300 rabbits living on the island. […]

It is believed that rabbits were first taken to the island in 1971, after an elementary school in Takehara found it difficult to keep the animals at school. According to the Kyukamura Okunoshima resort hotel, most of the visitors to the island consisted of students on school study trips and senior tourists.

[japanprobe / geekosystem.]

(Source: thedailywhat)

link
And last year, 15-year-old “Bunny” became one of Japan’s top authors of a genre called keitai — cellphone — novels.
“For Japan’s cellphone novelists, proof of success is in the print,” by
link
Bunny-shaped grapefruit dessert from Japan. From WeHeartIt.

Bunny-shaped grapefruit dessert from Japan. From WeHeartIt.

link
Snow White bunny. From the Rabbit Festa in Japan. From Calgary Herald.

Snow White bunny. From the Rabbit Festa in Japan. From Calgary Herald.

link
Angel bunny. From the Rabbit Festa in Japan. From Calgary Herald.

Angel bunny. From the Rabbit Festa in Japan. From Calgary Herald.

link
Santa bunny. From the Rabbit Festa in Japan. From Calgary Herald.

Santa bunny. From the Rabbit Festa in Japan. From Calgary Herald.

link
Aviator/Goth (?) bunny from Japan’s Rabbit Festa. From Yahoo.

Aviator/Goth (?) bunny from Japan’s Rabbit Festa. From Yahoo.

link
From the BBC’s Day in Pictures. The caption is as follows:
“Japan’s three-year-old Prince Hisashito, third in line to the Chrysantemum Throne, plays with a rabbit during a visit to Ueno Zoo in Tokyo.”
He’s quite the royal bunny.
Thanks, Cosette.

From the BBC’s Day in Pictures. The caption is as follows:

“Japan’s three-year-old Prince Hisashito, third in line to the Chrysantemum Throne, plays with a rabbit during a visit to Ueno Zoo in Tokyo.”

He’s quite the royal bunny.

Thanks, Cosette.

link

Because Japan is cooler than us, they have the Rabbit Cafe, where you are fed bunny-shaped foods, like bunny curry (!!!) and bunny-shaped rice, where there is a room of bunnies to play with, and you’re encouraged to bring your own bunny to mingle with his bunny peers. Amazingness.