Thanks! This wasn't the bunny I was concentrating on; I shot this one as an afterthought in between shots of the other one. Then when I reviewed my photos, I decided this was the most interesting of the series.
There was another one a few feet ahead of this one, maybe slightly closer to the house. Both appeared to be able to see me through the window -- they reacted when I moved from room to room; stopped eating and watched me -- but I'm not sure whether I was more than an indistinct figure to them. When neighbours much farther away went out into their yard, the rabbits flattened themselves down to just barely protrude above the grass and laid their ears down. I was surprised by just how much less visible they were able to become thereby. When the neighbours moved so that a tool shed blocked them from the rabbits' sight, the rabbits returned to a normal resting/grazing posture, and flattened out again as soon as a human again became visible past the shed.
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There was another one a few feet ahead of this one, maybe slightly closer to the house. Both appeared to be able to see me through the window -- they reacted when I moved from room to room; stopped eating and watched me -- but I'm not sure whether I was more than an indistinct figure to them. When neighbours much farther away went out into their yard, the rabbits flattened themselves down to just barely protrude above the grass and laid their ears down. I was surprised by just how much less visible they were able to become thereby. When the neighbours moved so that a tool shed blocked them from the rabbits' sight, the rabbits returned to a normal resting/grazing posture, and flattened out again as soon as a human again became visible past the shed.