seberrios
In the Brooder
- Dec 9, 2021
- 6
- 14
- 32
Hi there! I have a female Pilgrim Goose who has been limping for over a week and I am stumped!
The first day I noticed it, I inspected the foot that was giving her trouble and found a very small (about the size of a pin head) cut on the webbing between two toes. I cleaned and treated it and continued to do so for several days. But the limping and raising her foot when standing didn't improve at all, even though the little wound looked like it was healing nicely. At about the week mark I inspected all the way up her leg to see if it was something else...and I couldn't find any injuries. She didn't make any sounds of discomfort or pain when I fingered each toe and bone. I looked at dozens of pictures of different stages of bumblefoot, and I couldn't find any signs of that either.
I'm now at a total loss for what to do–other than wait and see what happens, which feels scary and wrong. I care about her a lot and want to make sure I'm being as proactive as possible to help her heal and recover.
Anyone ever seen this or have any advice?
The first day I noticed it, I inspected the foot that was giving her trouble and found a very small (about the size of a pin head) cut on the webbing between two toes. I cleaned and treated it and continued to do so for several days. But the limping and raising her foot when standing didn't improve at all, even though the little wound looked like it was healing nicely. At about the week mark I inspected all the way up her leg to see if it was something else...and I couldn't find any injuries. She didn't make any sounds of discomfort or pain when I fingered each toe and bone. I looked at dozens of pictures of different stages of bumblefoot, and I couldn't find any signs of that either.
I'm now at a total loss for what to do–other than wait and see what happens, which feels scary and wrong. I care about her a lot and want to make sure I'm being as proactive as possible to help her heal and recover.
Anyone ever seen this or have any advice?