- Mar 1, 2012
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Hi,
I asked this on another thread but only got one response. Was hoping for some more insight.
We have a two week old chick with an injured leg. Some of our chicks this year are HUGE--as in twice as large as the others--and I think this little one was injured by one of the bigger ones. It doesn't seem to be splayed legs--only one affected leg that is twisted abnormally.
I've read that you can splint it with pipecleaner or bandaid or popsickle stick, but others say that could cause more problems than leaving it alone.
My husband and I feel she probably won't make it, but our daughter is very upset. We even called a vet's office with an avian vet and she refused to see a chick.
We have the chick isolated in a cardboard box under a heatlamp with food and water. Is there anything else we can do? I'll try to attach a picture.
The affected leg is to the left in the picture (the chicken' right leg).
Any ideas?
Thanks for listening and for your thoughts.
I asked this on another thread but only got one response. Was hoping for some more insight.
We have a two week old chick with an injured leg. Some of our chicks this year are HUGE--as in twice as large as the others--and I think this little one was injured by one of the bigger ones. It doesn't seem to be splayed legs--only one affected leg that is twisted abnormally.
I've read that you can splint it with pipecleaner or bandaid or popsickle stick, but others say that could cause more problems than leaving it alone.
My husband and I feel she probably won't make it, but our daughter is very upset. We even called a vet's office with an avian vet and she refused to see a chick.
We have the chick isolated in a cardboard box under a heatlamp with food and water. Is there anything else we can do? I'll try to attach a picture.
The affected leg is to the left in the picture (the chicken' right leg).
Any ideas?
Thanks for listening and for your thoughts.