This is a specific conversation about Rabbit housing — space and setup that works — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
An Angora with a wool block history means housing isn't just about space — it's about making daily grooming manageable and keeping loose fibre out of the living and feeding areas. Most hutches sold in pet shops are already too small (rabbits need room for three full hops, space to stand fully upright, and separate sleeping and toilet zones), but for an Angora you also need a setup where you can groom safely without hay and droppings getting tangled into the coat. Before I suggest anything specific: is this rabbit kept indoors or outdoors, and do you have a rough sense of how much floor space you're working with?
She's indoors, single rabbit. I've got a decent-sized spare room I can section off but I want a proper hutch or enclosure as her base rather than just a pen.
inparticular.ai
That's a good setup to work with. For an Angora who's had wool block, the grooming zone really matters — you want a surface you can wipe clean completely, separate from where she eats and sleeps, so ingested fibre stays minimal. Can you tell me roughly how big she is and how often she's been needing grooming? Daily, every other day? That affects what kind of base unit will actually work for your routine.
She's a full-size English Angora, about 3.5kg. I'm grooming her every day at the moment because the vet said to keep on top of it after the wool block episode. She's fine in herself now but I'm taking no chances.
inparticular.ai
Daily grooming on a 3.5kg English Angora is serious commitment — well done for keeping it up. The product I'd point you toward as her base unit is the Omlet Eglu Go Hutch. It's designed for indoor or sheltered outdoor use, and what makes it right for your situation specifically is the smooth, fully enclosed sleeping pod paired with a separate attached run. The pod interior has no rough edges or slatted floors where wool can snag and accumulate — you can wipe it out completely in under a minute. You'd use the run section as her main living and feeding area, and set up a small grooming table or mat just outside the hutch within your sectioned room. That physical separation — sleep pod, living run, grooming station — is exactly what an Angora with wool block history needs. Loose fibre doesn't migrate into her hay or water, and you can see immediately if she's shedding heavily. It also comes in sizes that suit a rabbit her size comfortably.
That sounds sensible. What about flooring in the run section — I've read slatted floors are bad for rabbits generally but also worried about hygiene given her coat?
inparticular.ai
You're right to flag both. Slatted or wire floors are hard on rabbit feet over time and can cause sore hocks, so avoid those entirely. For the Eglu run, line the base with a washable fleece mat or a rubber-backed pet rug — both are easy to shake out and machine wash, which is important when you're managing an Angora coat. Put her litter tray in one corner of the run with a low-dust paper-based litter like Carefresh — it traps loose wool better than wood shavings and won't add respiratory irritation. Swap the fleece liner every two to three days and do a full run wipe-down weekly. That routine, combined with your daily grooming outside the enclosure, keeps ingested fibre to a minimum and gives you a clear view of her coat condition every single day.
Really helpful, thank you. I'll look up the Eglu Go Hutch now.
inparticular.ai
It should come up easily on Amazon UK — search 'Omlet Eglu Go Rabbit Hutch' and check the sizing options; the standard size works well for a single English Angora with an attached run extension if you want extra floor space. Given her history, I'd also suggest keeping a small grooming log — just a note of how much coat you're removing each session. If you suddenly notice a drop in grooming yield alongside any change in her droppings, that's your early warning to call the vet before it becomes another blockage. Good luck with her — she sounds well cared for.