This is a specific conversation about Rabbit supplies — what you actually need — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A free-roaming Silver rabbit — lovely choice, and a smart one, because rabbits genuinely thrive when they have space to explore. But Silvers are active, curious, and young ones especially will chew anything they can reach, which makes bunny-proofing less optional and more urgent. Before I point you to the right kit, a couple of quick questions: how old is your rabbit, and are you free-roaming in one room or across the whole house? That changes what you'll need.
She's about 4 months old and I'm planning to let her have the run of the living room and hallway to start with. Main worry is the cables — there are quite a few behind the TV unit and along the skirting boards.
inparticular.ai
Four months is peak chewing age, so you're right to tackle this now rather than after she's found the TV cables. The area behind a TV unit is exactly the kind of spot rabbits make a beeline for — enclosed, slightly dark, feels safe to them, and full of interesting things to destroy. What I'd recommend is a split cable loom — flexible plastic tubing you thread cables through — combined with cable trunking along the skirting boards for the runs she can reach at floor level. Have you got a sense of how many cables are exposed, and whether they're loose or already somewhat managed?
Quite a few loose ones behind the TV, and then a few charger cables that just sit on the floor near the sofa. The skirting board runs are probably the bigger issue honestly.
inparticular.ai
For the skirting board runs, I'd go with D-Line cable trunking — the flat-backed plastic conduit that clips to the wall just above skirting level. It's what electricians use, it comes in white or black to match your room, and it's genuinely chew-resistant in a way that spiral wrap and fabric sleeves just aren't with a determined rabbit. You cut it to length, drop the cables in, and clip the lid shut. For the loose floor cables near the sofa, pair that with some CableMod split loom tubing for anything you can't route along the wall — it's flexible, durable, and easy to open if you need to add cables later. The D-Line trunking on Amazon UK comes in multipacks with adhesive strips and fixings included, which makes it a straightforward job even on skirting boards.
That sounds good. Is there anything else I should be thinking about for the hallway specifically?
inparticular.ai
Hallways are often overlooked but they have a few specific hazards. Check for any low door gaps where she could wedge herself, and if you have stairs, a simple adjustable pet gate at the bottom is worth it — rabbits can go up stairs easily but coming down is where injuries happen. Also look at any houseplants at floor level; a surprising number are toxic to rabbits, including ivy and pothos which are really common. If your hallway has a coat rack with bags or leads hanging low, those will get chewed too. But honestly, the cables are the most dangerous immediate risk, so getting the D-Line trunking sorted first is the right call.
Really helpful, thank you. I'll grab the D-Line trunking and the split loom for the floor cables.
inparticular.ai
Perfect combination. One tip: install it before she gets full access to those rooms rather than trying to do it while she's already exploring — four-month-old rabbits have no patience for you rearranging their territory. Good luck with her, Silver rabbits are brilliant little characters.