Injured duck help

It's been a month since this little girl's leg was hurt by a drake trying to mate her. I learned from the people who gave her to me that she was hatched April 25, her injury occurred a couple of days prior to my first position June 30 so she was about two months old when this occurred. Since then she's been living in a kennel lined with towels and paper in the house, fed Purina duck feed sprinkled with nutritional yeast, gets 2 ml Duravet High Level Vitamin B Complex twice a day, gets two swims in her pool for half an hour each day; she's able to stand on her good foot when she's buoyed up by the water but not on land. I'm not seeing any improvement. Her appetite is good, she's alert and talks a lot and seems healthy otherwise. The injured foot is warm but limp. She can stand but not for long as she can't bear weight on the injured foot nor can she tuck it under her as she does the other foot. The injured leg appears to be slightly out of angle compared to the uninjured leg. I've not been able to feel any breaks along the leg up toward the hip. Here are some photos from earlier today. Is there anything else I can do for her? I'm willing to stick with her as long as she needs me to but if she'll never be able to walk, I wonder at the quality of life I'm subjecting her to over the long run. Thoughts, please.
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Did you check for dislocation at the hip? When you lay her on her back for a few minutes can you pull both legs straight out and both are the same length?
Maybe something like this for support?
https://www.amazon.com/vomvomp-Splint-Chicken-Poultry-Broken/dp/B0BRXK76HT
I haven't specifically checked for dislocated hip, not sure how to do it effectively by myself without causing her undue pain. I'm taking her to Washington State University Veterinerary Hospital tomorrow morning.
 
Please let us know what they say!
To begin, little Sue didn't make it. She had no broken bones and her hips were aligned properly. However, the bones in her left hock were either falling apart or completely disintegrated. The vet said that, while the drake did her no favors by mounting her at such a young age, the issue with her hock was quite likely already in process, most likely as a result of an infection. The vet said further that issues with the hock generally, but not always, have a poor prognosis. She was bright and exuberant and healthy in every other way but expecting her to live unable to walk was unfair and so I let her go. That hurt so much. It still does. These little lives for which we take responsibility deserve the best we can give them and when the best we can give them is to let them go, it hurts. I miss her squawk and her little attitude, I just miss her sweet little self.

I've attached the x-ray.
 

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Oh gosh I am so sorry you had to make that decision but I am with you that you made the right one, More than likely she was in pain too?
It is heartbreaking when we have to say goodbye they are all so precious to us. :hugs
 
Thank you, Miss Lydia. It's been hard but, over time, the hurt takes its place and we move forward. Won't forget her though. Will bury her in the garden tomorrow.

Thanks for the hug :)
 

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