There are lots of different eggs you can get in Grow A Garden, and the “common” egg is, unsurprisingly, the most common, and the bunny is just one of the pets you can find inside one of the common eggs. If you’d like to find out more about this pet, and its benefits, keep on reading…

What Is The Grow A Garden Bunny Pet?
There are currently two rabbit pets within Grow A Garden. There’s the bunny, which is this one, and there’s also a Black Bunny, and the Black Bunny is hatchable in a different type of egg.
The bunny is a white rabbit with big ears and pink inside the ears, and a smiley face.
When you hatch the bunny pet, it makes the most adorable squeak noise (if you have sound turned on of course), and the bunny hops throughout your garden.
You can find the bunny pet inside the Grow A Garden Common Eggs, which are just 50,000 (fifty thousand sheckles), and the most affordable eggs within the game.
The common eggs will give you one of three pets:
- Golden Lab (beige) 33.33%
- Dog (white and brown) 33.33%
- Bunny (white) 33.33%
With two different dogs, and a rabbit, and all three have the same percentage chance, so it’s even chance for which pet you’ll get.

What Does The Bunny Pet Do In Grow A Garden?
This pet will eat a carrot from your garden every 40 seconds, and you’ll receive 1.5x cash for the carrot it eats, plus it means you don’t have to run around trying to feed it, as it feeds itself from your carrots.
The benefit is very similar to that of the Black Bunny, in that it eats your carrots (providing you even have carrots growing in your farm), and gives you a small increase in the sheckles back.

I personally don’t even have carrots or berries growing in my farm, as they take up so much room, and give you such a small return, so I wouldn’t ever have pets that are connected to the growth or sale of carrots or berries (like the two deer).
I do think the bunny is very cute, and I love the hopping animation. I’d love to see more rabbit pets introduced in the future, with a special version, like the blood owl/kiwi/hedgehog, and with a more improved benefit.
