Duck with bumble foot, please advise!

It could be time to think about tube feeding. You can get a tubing kit for a small animal from the vet. Or you can easily make one from aquarium or oxygen tubing. You would need to fine an oral syringe that would hold enough to do some good and will fit into the diameter of the tubing. Here is my instructions on tubing.

Tube feeding a chicken is about the safest most fool-proof things a chicken keeper can do. There is pretty nearly nothing that can go wrong. Even a child can do it, and this past spring, two kids on this forum successfully saved the lives of several hens in their flock by tubing a life-saving solution over three days. First, obtain the small animal kit from a vet or from Amazon. You can fashion your own from oxygen tubing or aquarium tubing. You would need to find an oral syringe to fit the tubing that holds about one to two ounces. A slender one millimeter syringe is too small to do much good. Next, cut the bottom off at around nine or ten inches to make it easier to manage. You will prepare a solution of raw egg, a little yogurt, maybe a little soy protein powder and enough warm water to make it flow through a tube. I add a squirt of poultry vitamins such as Poultry Nutri-drench. Or you can buy baby bird formula from a pet store. This is to feed a weak or starving chicken. Other uses would be to give electrolytes to a shock victim or a flush solution to an impacted chicken. For an average chicken, about half a cup of solution will be how much to tube in. Now, what most people fear most - the part where you insert the tube. But this is very easy as the chicken has a direct channel going from the right side of the throat right into their crop, by-passing the airway so there is zero chance of aspiration. After wrapping my chicken securely in a towel to confine wings, I hold my chicken on a work bench with my weak arm. With that hand I pry open the beak holding it open, and with my strong hand, I insert the tube in her right side of the beak, going slightly under the right side of the tongue. This channels the tube right into the esophagus which goes directly into the crop. You can see this in the photo below, only it will be the tube and not the syringe. I measure the tube from the beak to the bottom of the chicken's crop and make a mark so I'll know when the tube has reached the lower part of the crop. The first time if you hit the wrong hole your chicken will start to cough. It's okay, no harm, just back out and try again. Once the tube is in, the chicken will be calm and comfortable. Then you can begin feeding. It feels pleasant to the chicken, and most are very cooperative throughout the process. If the chicken struggles and bucks all of a sudden, it's not because of anything you did. They get bored and tired of the process like a toddler would. Pause until the chicken settles down again and finish. The whole process takes no more than five minutes. Each time you do it, it gets easier and quicker. Learning this can save the life of your chicken, and it can save you so much time and frustration. And it's very, very safe. Anyone can do it.
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It could be time to think about tube feeding. You can get a tubing kit for a small animal from the vet. Or you can easily make one from aquarium or oxygen tubing. You would need to fine an oral syringe that would hold enough to do some good and will fit into the diameter of the tubing. Here is my instructions on tubing.

Tube feeding a chicken is about the safest most fool-proof things a chicken keeper can do. There is pretty nearly nothing that can go wrong. Even a child can do it, and this past spring, two kids on this forum successfully saved the lives of several hens in their flock by tubing a life-saving solution over three days. First, obtain the small animal kit from a vet or from Amazon. You can fashion your own from oxygen tubing or aquarium tubing. You would need to find an oral syringe to fit the tubing that holds about one to two ounces. A slender one millimeter syringe is too small to do much good. Next, cut the bottom off at around nine or ten inches to make it easier to manage. You will prepare a solution of raw egg, a little yogurt, maybe a little soy protein powder and enough warm water to make it flow through a tube. I add a squirt of poultry vitamins such as Poultry Nutri-drench. Or you can buy baby bird formula from a pet store. This is to feed a weak or starving chicken. Other uses would be to give electrolytes to a shock victim or a flush solution to an impacted chicken. For an average chicken, about half a cup of solution will be how much to tube in. Now, what most people fear most - the part where you insert the tube. But this is very easy as the chicken has a direct channel going from the right side of the throat right into their crop, by-passing the airway so there is zero chance of aspiration. After wrapping my chicken securely in a towel to confine wings, I hold my chicken on a work bench with my weak arm. With that hand I pry open the beak holding it open, and with my strong hand, I insert the tube in her right side of the beak, going slightly under the right side of the tongue. This channels the tube right into the esophagus which goes directly into the crop. You can see this in the photo below, only it will be the tube and not the syringe. I measure the tube from the beak to the bottom of the chicken's crop and make a mark so I'll know when the tube has reached the lower part of the crop. The first time if you hit the wrong hole your chicken will start to cough. It's okay, no harm, just back out and try again. Once the tube is in, the chicken will be calm and comfortable. Then you can begin feeding. It feels pleasant to the chicken, and most are very cooperative throughout the process. If the chicken struggles and bucks all of a sudden, it's not because of anything you did. They get bored and tired of the process like a toddler would. Pause until the chicken settles down again and finish. The whole process takes no more than five minutes. Each time you do it, it gets easier and quicker. Learning this can save the life of your chicken, and it can save you so much time and frustration. And it's very, very safe. Anyone can do it.
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I thought so, thank you for your advice!
I've given her some egg and some vitamins, hopefully she feels a bit better soon.
 
Put some sugar in her water. It will raise her glucose and give her more energy and maybe incentive to try eating. Use one teaspoon sugar to a cup of water.
Will do
On that note I have a question, I found a product called critical care formula which is aimed at birds, reptiles and mammals, it consists solely of dextrose and whey protein powder

The whey is throwing me off, do you think it'd be safe to give to her? I thought it may have enough glucose in to stimulate her appetite?
In the meantime I'll try some sugar water
 
The critical care formula would be safe to give your patient. Whey protein is safe for poultry. You can also use the sugar in her water for good measure. This wouldn't be for long as the sugars should work their magic in just a day or two. I've seen a little extra sugar turn a sick bird right around, stimulating appetite and getting them eating again.
 
The critical care formula would be safe to give your patient. Whey protein is safe for poultry. You can also use the sugar in her water for good measure. This wouldn't be for long as the sugars should work their magic in just a day or two. I've seen a little extra sugar turn a sick bird right around, stimulating appetite and getting them eating again.
I hope so! She's been getting a bit better, the last thing we want is for her to starve herself. Any idea how often I should feed her until she's got her appetite back?

Her bumble might be starting to get smaller, based on my check of it this evening, hopefully the antibiotics manage to finish it off so that she can come off the medications soon. I have a suspicion they may be the reason for her lack of appetite more so than the infection itself
 
A sick bird loses their appetite. They stop eating. They lose weight. They lose their energy. This is a vicious circle resulting in weakness which causes more appetite loss. At some point, if we don't intervene, the bird can starve.

When I have this situation, I will tube feed for one day, probably with a feeding in the early part of the day and another before bedtime. Often this single day of tube feeding can "jump start" the bird's appetite by infusing them with nourishment, and they then recover their appetite and begin eating on their own the next day.

After the one day of tube feeding, I usually offer high protein special foods to pack their system with nourishment. This gives the bird energy which causes the normal appetite to return.
 

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