Let me clear. The chicks died more than a month ago. Ill try doing the dirt thing as you have said.
Where are you from if you don't mind me asking? (It can help us understand what kind of resources you have available with out having to ask.) Are feed stores available to you? The easiest way to get grit is to buy it from a feed store.
What do you normally feed the chicks? Do you feed them chick starter with a protein range around 18-20%?
If it hasn’t eaten for days that to me is a sign that the chick isn’t healthy and I doubt it’s from the balloon. You need to get the chick to eat something.
OP stated the chicken hadn't eaten since eating the balloon piece around 5-6 pm last night. I don't believe they've indicated it hasn't eaten for longer than that.
A chicken with an impacted crop usually has a FULL crop that hasn't emptied, because a chicken's desire is to eat until it's crop is full! It doesn't know it has an impacted crop and won't naturally stop eating. This doesn't meant there isn't a problem elsewhere in the chicken's system.
Dude its just standing idle even in dirt its not eating. How do i make it eat?
In my experience, just throwing in dirt for some chicks, they won't eat it right away, or sometimes at all. It isn't until I start giving them access to the chicken run outside that they start to explore more.
I'm not sure exactly what is wrong with your chicken, but I feel we can rule out a crop issue. The bird is still pooping, but since the obstruction was
recent this could be just the bowels emptying out. Within the next 12 hours, if pooping stops this would indicate
for sure that there is an obstruction. Check out this link for an impaction in the gizzard:
https://www.farmhealthonline.com/disease-management/poultry-diseases/crop-impaction/
I still believe putting oil in its beak is the way to go. To others who have said not to force feed it, I've given dozens of rounds of syringe-fed medicines to my flock and never once had a bird aspirate and I can
assure you that simply putting the medicine in front of the bird and hoping for the best will not get the bird to eat it.
The above article still suggest feeding the bird oil. It also suggests feeding a mixture of water and Epson salts, which is a mild laxative. I personally would start with the oil
because oil will have no side affects whatsoever on your bird and if the bird stops pooping, start with the Epson salt treatment. I wouldn't start with Epson salts yet because if the bird isn't suffering from an obstruction you'll only dehydrate it.
Chicks usually like scrambled eggs,
and they don't need chick grit to eat scrambled eggs. Fix it a scramble egg to see if that will entice its appetite.