Would you follow this rather curious rabbit?
I’m still not entirely sure how this particular creature hopped into my consciousness to become the eponymous rabbit in my historical fantasy novel, Following the Green Rabbit, but it is he, or at least one of his cousins, that leads my two young heroines, Bethany and Bryony, and their tutor, Mr Eyre, through a portal into the past. Somehow he seemed to fit the bill, since I needed an unusual animal to appear in order to pique Bethany’s youthful curiosity and engage the interest of Mr Eyre’s enquiring mind.
Here’s where the two sisters come across the rabbit for the first time:
They had been silent for a little while, when suddenly they heard something rustling in the bushes by the fence behind them. They looked round to see an enormous rabbit emerge, nose twitching. His fur was grey-brown with a slight tinge of green. He nibbled on a piece of long grass, and then hopped past them. He was so close that Bryony could have stretched out and touched him. He stopped by the first tree and sat up on his hind legs. Then he turned and looked directly at them.
“That’s the biggest rabbit I’ve ever seen. Look at his fur.” Bryony whispered.
The rabbit’s ears twitched. “Do you think he wants us to follow him?” Bethany whispered back.
Bryony laughed. “You’re not Alice.” It was only last year that Bryony had read ‘Alice in Wonderland’ to her.
“But look, Briney.” The rabbit had raised a paw in their direction. “I’ll just go a bit nearer.” She stood up slowly so as not to alarm the creature, then took a few steps towards him.
The rabbit hopped off as far as the next stand of apple trees. He stopped and turned, looking up at Bethany with his dark brown eyes. His left ear bent quizzically. She looked back at Bryony. “I’m going to follow him.”
(Of course, I couldn’t resist tossing in the Alice in Wonderland reference as the prelude to what was about to happen!)
But back to the actual green rabbit…
I took the two photos of the rapidly retreating rabbit at the top of the page while travelling on a tourist bus through part of the Atacama Desert in Chile on a trip to the El Tatio Geyser fields, some 14,000 feet above sea level, where the air is very thin and very cold.
Here are two more of my holiday snaps from that trip: one El Tatio geyser and two vicuñas in the Atacama Desert.
Since we would be travelling high, high up into the mountains over the 50 mile journey to reach the geysers from our base in San Pedro de Atacama, at breakfast early that morning I’d taken the precaution of consuming several cups of coca leaf tea as a protection against altitude sickness. On the way back from the geysers, when I saw this huge, green-tinged ‘rabbit’, I wondered if I’d actually consumed a little too much of the coca tea, such a curious creature it seemed to be. Actually, although coca leaves are the base for cocaine production, the amount of the coca alkaloid in raw coca leaves is minimal. Still, a green rabbit it a curious sight, even if you’re only suffering a little light-headedness from descending from the breathless heights of a volcano ring.
In fact, it’s not a rabbit at all. Let me allow Mr Eyre to explain:
Bryony came upon Mr Eyre in the library. He was sitting at the large reading desk which had been placed in the window overlooking the small garden. He was slowly leafing through her papa’s ‘Illustrated book of World Animals’.
He looked up as she approached. “I came across this when I was unpacking your father’s books. I thought I’d see if that green rabbit fellow of ours was listed in here. I’m pretty sure it’s not native to the British Isles.”
Bryony sat at the desk opposite him, watching him turn the pages. “Ah, what’s this?” He turned the page towards her. It was a picture of a large, green-tinged rabbit looking animal. The inscription below read: ‘Viscacha, a rodent in the Chinchilla family found in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, and Peru’.
“It certainly looks like him, but what would he have been doing in Bluebell Woods?”
“I don’t know Bryony. Maybe there’s a doorway to other parts of the world too?”
Maybe Mr Eyre is pointing us to another adventure? I’m sure he’d jump at the opportunity!
In the meantime, I’ve attracted my own little following of rabbits:

You can do some ‘green rabbit’ watching for yourself. The accompanying music is rather splendid too!
Following the Green Rabbit is available on Kindle and in paperback: mybook.to/GreenRabbit
[…] Little Inspirations: chasing rabbits […]
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Thanks for sharing!
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It is quite impressive. You found the perfect animal to pique the curiosity of your protagonist and your readers.
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I could do with his warm fur coat this morning, it’s really chilly. Not literally, of course! 🐇
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It’s very hot and humid over here.
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I’m sure. To be honest, I’d happily trade. I’m a real hot house flower. 🌻
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Then come over, you’re most welcome.
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One day… 😀
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Great!
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Cute little guy. We bought my Mum a rabbit and she couldn’t accept it, saying the dog would kill it and she had nowhere to keep one (Hubby was stroking it in his coat). We told her it was low maintenance and house trained, then presented her with a garden ornament.
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Oh that’s priceless, Di! 🤣
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She loved it and used it as a doorstop, bless her.
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😀
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i m more familiar with the white rabbit. being a fan of jack and jorma and that jefferson airplane!
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That would be a very different story requiring more than a handful of coca leaves!!
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I would follow a green rabbit, Chris. This book–for those who haven’t read it–is entirely enjoyable.
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Thanks so much, Jacqui! – btw I just finished ‘Laws of Nature’ – loved it!!!
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Thank you! I’ve already faced down three tech problems today so your words are balm to my troubled soul.
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Pleased to have been of help, Jacqui! Tech probs 😒
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I just watched the video. The viscachas certainly are strange little creatures. I can see how one would inspire a character in a novel.
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It must have taken ages to film. Worth it though!
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Definitely worth it! It was fascinating to watch.
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Wow. Chris! This is so inspiring and it’s so amazing to see how you could find inspiration in Rabbit!
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Thanks so much, Celine!
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Aww he is absolutely too cute!! I had forgotten about Mr. Eyre reading that to the girls. That would have been a good one for my “ABC animals” project a few years ago! 😀🐰
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I was just wondering whether there are enough South American animals to do another one sometime! Let’s see… alpaca, bat, capybara… 😉
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Hey, good idea…🤔
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😀
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Doorways to other parts of the world (and even other worlds) are just begging to be explored, Chris. Finding them can be a bit tricky, unless a green-tinged rabbit happens to hop by, of course! 🙂
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Sometimes it’s easier to get in than get out!
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This, of course, is very true. 🙂
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Reblogged this on Nelsapy.
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Engrossing, Chris. Did you find the coca leaf tea help with adjustment to altitude?
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Hard to say, Matthew. I don’t recall any ill effects of the altitude, apart from a slight feeling of breathlessness when walking around at the geysers. But that was the day that jetlag finally caught up with me and I almost fell asleep in my suppertime soup!
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The experiment ruined by dastardly jetlag!
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This is an entertaining read, Chris. I didn’t know about the green tinged rabbit look alikes in South America.
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I’m sure I wouldn’t have either, had I not seen one, Robbie! Pleased you liked the little extracts.
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