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- #161
Birdielee
Songster
Need to give her the antibiotic. This is dose 4 ?
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There is one area that i was a little concerned about, but as i worked on her, my hands turned the same color green, turmeric+purple gentian. Her exposed neck muscle looks a little more moist than it has been. Everything smells clean.
I poured iodine everywhere.
The green in this case was purple dye from the bluekote mixed with orange from the turmeric.I’ve been working on understanding the husbandry of chickens from 1700s... the language of the book makes it a bit difficult at times, but the book discusses “Green Wound” remedies and on the Natural Chicken Keeping OT’s Welcome we discussed this type of wound in context of book and experiences... so first you should know other folks have had this stage of the wound occur in injured birds and their birds did heal... the treatments in the old book are using herbal remedies (that was the only option then) on the wound though the herbs suggestions are different they do the same stuff as what you are doing with what you are using. Your doing great. So expect the wound to look ugly, but as long as no smell, swelling, sudden redness, murky fluid starts developing you are good.
“What in the world did they do for green wounds? (Gangrene? Or a different green?)”
Well the same book specifically mentions Gangrene as a different condition with a different treatment... and based on us talking through the archaic language and people’s experience with wounds in chickens that also included pressure such as a fox biting, impact with piercing wounds. We decided it’s a wound that includes bruising with the laceration.