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Start with two storage bins that fit inside
one another with enough room to surround the inner shelter
with straw. A 90 quart bin fits well inside the Rubbermaid
Duratote 50 gallon for example. They are in the $9 and $17 range at Walmart. A little
more expensive at Home Depot and other stores. Soft plastic
is much easier to cut than the clear hard plastic. We used
a clear hard plastic Sterelite 90 quart bin for the demo photos
to show the construction process more clearly.

Two bins that can work
- Cut a 6-7 inch hole in the end of each bin near the center
of the side of each bin with a linoleum knife. A square
hole is fine if you find it to difficult to cut a circle. In
cold weather, warm the plastic bins (a hair dryer works) to
make cutting much, much easier. If the plastic cracks
you can tape it up with Gorilla waterproof tape. Cutting
the hole is the only hard part. There are special hole
cutting attachment tools you can buy for a drill if you plan
to make several shelters. Ask at your Home Depot or hardware
store.

- Put enough straw on the bottom of the larger bin so that when
you set the smaller bin inside, the holes line up.
- Stuff straw between the sides of the two bins. Pack it all
the way down for equal insulation all around.


- Tape the holes together with a strong winter proof tape (Gorilla
Tape is good). This prevents the straw from coming out between
the two holes. You can square up the ragged edges with
more tape, as in the second photo if your picky like us.


- Put the lid on the smaller bin, top that with straw and put
the lid on the Larger bin. Tape around with the super strong
tape (Gorilla is Great!) if you think your bin could pop open
or doesn’t have strong latches.

- Put a layer of straw inside the finished shelter. Cloth
bedding absorbs body warmth and is not as effective as the straw.
Specially designed heat-reflective animal bedding and mats may
work well inside and can be removed to be cleaned.
Reinforce with tape wherever you think necessary throughout the
construction process. Some bins latch well and others can use taping
to seal the cracks and assure no water leaking.
Straw is preferable to hay as an insulator. Hay is food for animals,
but straw is only for bedding. A bale may be more than you
need but is much cheaper than buying the 4-5 small rabbit bags
you’ll need at a pet shop. Straw bales can be bought at Feed
Stores or ordered at a garden shop. Small bags for
rabbits can be bought or ordered at a pet store and may be more
convenient to find thought more expensive.
Drilling or nailing holes
in the bottom corners of the larger bin will allow drainage if
you think water could get in.
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