Update: I viewed the images myself and noted significant heterotopic ossification surrounding the joint.
She is on amoxicillin clavulanate (wide spectrum antibiotic) and metacam (NSAID).
I’m making her a body sling to remove pressure from the joint, and will continue daily assisted tub time...
...to visit.
She was kept inside a barn with a cement floor, with a thin layer of straw as bedding.
She was fed 50% straight corn, 50% low quality *chicken* feed.
No one helped her preen.
No one changed her stump bandage until I did it myself when we visited her. It had been almost a month...
Correct! Her preen gland is fine, but her disability makes it harder to preen, so her tail and flight feathers don’t zip, and her back feathers are prone to brittleness. I’m hoping her next molt will solve the zipping issues.
I’ve tweaked the recipe to 1/3 beeswax and 2/3 sweet almond oil. I...
Yep! If anyone has come up with something that helps, I haven’t been able to find it. So, undeterred, I decided to invent it myself! Forest, my co-captain, enjoys her extra pats and soft smoothness. The drakes find her irresistible. 😍
Oh my gosh. I don’t have links, but one of the most helpful topics to look at for me was the actual chemical composition of preen oils. There are published findings, but I didn’t save links. Once I knew what is actually produced by the oil gland, I was better prepared to approximate it.
I’ve...
Update: It has helped her feathers be less brittle! I’m gonna fool around with the ratios a little, but 1:1 beeswax and sweet almond oil applied sparingly after tub time seems to be a positive step!
Hi everybody! After some thorough research, I have decided to try out a mixture of almond oil and beeswax to help my special needs duck with her feather care.
She has one leg, and while she does get daily tub time and help balancing while she preens, she has not been able to maintain her...
It definitely had a big ol’ core, which I cut out. (Yes, I know about sugardine, everybody. But this gal had bumblefoot when I got her, which had already affected her tendons on the left side. That leg is healed up now (has been for months), but gets sore when the weather is cold.) It’s her...
Long story short, we brought home a duck who turned out to have EXTREME bumblefoot which advanced quickly and ended with amputation.
I think Holly (the gal this post is about) got the same kind of infection from the new duck (based on how it looks and is acting - stringy and persistent) and we...
Frick! She now has bumble in her other foot, and it’s not looking good.
Long story short, we brought home a duck who turned out to have EXTREME bumblefoot which advanced quickly and ended with amputation.
I think Holly (the gal this post is about) got the same kind of infection from the new...
She is doing well! Thank you for asking. She limps on that leg when it’s cold, and I assume she always will. Warm soaks help, and she’s a very active and happy gal.
Update: I did a light compression/support wrap after her last epsom salt soak of the day. It’s at least making it more awkward for her to put weight on that leg, so that might help it heal more effectively.
I plan to remove it in the morning and re-re-re-re-re-reasses.
That was my first thought, but if so I would expect the pullets to be targeted, and honestly more carnage.
Maybe... her body was just like, “F***k it let’s MOLT!!!”?
How can I help my gal whose bumblefoot infection got to her ligament/tendon sheaths? Her foot is fine, infection gone, but she still limps pretty severely.