What feed is she on? Has her appetite changed?I am not sure whether I should start a new post or piggy back on this post for the same problem. If I need to do a new post, I certainly will.
My 3 year old Buff goose is exhibiting the same symptoms. She started limping 3 days ago for no apparent reason. She doesn’t have bumble-foot. It is considerably worse today and she can hardly put weight on her left leg. I read through some posts and thought maybe she may have a vitamin deficiency, so I gave her some fortified nutritional yeast with niacin, put some poultry vitamins in her water, and left crushed oyster shells out for her today. She has eaten/drunk all of the above, but still has not improved. Maybe it will take a day or two? She is also exhibiting two other strange behaviors - she is not holding her wings up and just letting them droop. Also, she has been going to the fire pit and digging around for charcoal. She has been eating the charcoal for the past week. Please let me know if you know what is going on and how I can help her. She laid an egg yesterday and is due to lay again tomorrow, but I don’t know if she will. Thank you!View attachment 4044780
Has she had any unusual droppings, red, pink, orange, neon green, excessively white? Bubbly or mostly watery droppings?
How do her eggs look? Are they thin? Have you seen calcium deposits on the eggs?
Eating charcoal can mean she’s calcium deficient. If she’s eating charcoal, dirt, and sand that’s pica and it can mean she has a serious vitamin deficiency or stomach discomfort from an infection or parasite. Charcoal is great for detoxification and birds will crave it because they can also absorb calcium from it, however its ability to scrub toxins means it’s excellent at absorbing vitamins and nutrients, calcium can also do this which complicates things if she’s calcium deficient and B vitamin deficient at the same time.
You could try giving her direct doses of a B vitamin complex, lack of B6 can cause droopy wings, if you can find calcium gluconate that will help her if she has a deficiency in that regard, but probably give one in the morning and the other at night to give her a better chance of absorbing the Bs without interference from the calcium.