Oh yeah, that was another thing. Charlie took a lot longer to grow, I thought that her growth had been stunted because of the ingury, but she caught up the others eventually.I could make it straight but it seems so much more painful and more stiff now than it was in the beginning to make it straight, and more swollen. She's been in the same splint all day today and it's staying on. She still won't put weight on it though. If I make it straight even if I'm not sure about the tendon would that be better than leaving a little bend?
Poor thing, I'm sad she had to be my experiment. She's already stunted in size compared to the others. But I put her back in the brooder instead of her hospital bed. She loaded up on food and I saw her drinking from the brooder bottle. She's always in a different spot in the brooder when I check.
Her leg will get more stiff each day. Charlie is 3 years old and she can't move her leg at all. Her leg is locked in place at the joint. Though if she has any chance at a normal life, you need to keep trying to force it straight. Each chick of mine cried because of the pain, and since yours is older, it will only be worse. Temporary pain is better than a lifelong deformity though. If you want to give it one more go, then force her leg straight one last time and use your fingers to massage up. Maybe by chance you will finally find the tendon. Otherwise, you may need to accept that she will forever be like this.