A century of Turkey talk 2000-2100.

Is there anything I can give her untill vet. Shes still hopping around eating and chatting with me.

I await @casportpony reply too. I am at the point I am thinking of aspirating and seeing what or if I have fluid in the "lump".
I'm the slice and dice type, so I would "explore", but I have all the supplies needed. I'd also do it knowing that I could make it much worse. If a vet is an option, I say don't mess with it. If it were on the footpad, or some other fleshy part, that would be much different, but this looks like the joint is involved.
 
Ive been soaking it. At first there was a tiny scab on her back toe. Not big or black or deep. I thought bumble foot but there was nothing under it at all and the scab was red and really thin.
I had a cock with an infection that started traveling up his leg. He got Exede injected into the breast, until the swelling dropped and a bubble surfaced that we could do something with. When the vet dug into the infection, there was the cheesy kernel, and about 6 or7 cheatgrass seed heads inside his leg. He got another Exede injection and he healed up well, just has a leg and foot that will permanently be bigger than the other. He's become quite the gentleman to the younger pullets, escorting them anytime the alphas are busy elsewhere and not harassing them. It's an off label use for Exede.
 
When they're that big, weight wise, once their leg structure integrity is compromised it becomes a downhill losing battle... there is just too much meat weight kept on 2 hollow sticks with hinges... trying to fix one will cause the other to take even more weight and stress the good leg beyond capacity quicker...

Make sense?


Yep, just wondering. I watch my toads for this same thing and had the problem in the first couple generations.
 
60 bucks a bag!!!

Poor turkey your gonna starve to death..........wow!
I actually gasped when the guy told me the price. Just to be sure we were on the same page, I reminded him we're talking about feed grade--not human food grade. I paid $40 a bag for the stuff I grind into flour and make bread with. He also wants astronomical prices for his mixed feeds. Its $10/bag in KY and $9 in AL.:confused:
 
Yep, just wondering. I watch my toads for this same thing and had the problem in the first couple generations.

Yup, same concept... they can compartmentalize pain much, much better than we can, so things like minor surgeries, treatable infections, etc are worth working through... but once legs 'blow out' that will always cause ongoing pain... not worth putting them through that, IMO, because you know they never will give up, just keep trying... :(
 
Yup, same concept... they can compartmentalize pain much, much better than we can, so things like minor surgeries, treatable infections, etc are worth working through... but once legs 'blow out' that will always cause ongoing pain... not worth putting them through that, IMO, because you know they never will give up, just keep trying... :(

Yeppers, and they inevitably lead to other injuries which lead to more, the snowballing is not worth the effort if you have an option.
 
I have a question. My turkeys free range most of the day. Plus they get their feed. If I need to go away a couple of days, can I substitute something like hanging squash or melons since they will have to stay penned?
 

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