The jill ferret ambushes a rabbit from behind.
A working ferret has a built in instinct to bite the back of a prey animals neck. An approach from the rear helps avoid detection. Although this naive rabbit does keep an ear cocked back, it still allows itself to become tangled with the ferret. The ferret will clamber Its way over the victims body using their curved nails and attach their jaws as close to the neck as possible..
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These rabbits are collected for food, for my ferrets and people. This is a free range meat, that has lived a free life. These rabbits will be controlled even without me. By taking them myself, the meat is used. Ferreting is an environmentally friendly method of harvesting free range meat.
Rabbit control and the law - https://www.gov.uk/guidance/rabbits-how-to-control-numbers