must be a "No Bumble Zone!"
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I've gone minimalist too. No longer do the surgery. Epsom salt soaks and an ointment of CEH calendula, echinacea and hypericum (St. Johns wort). Load up the foot pad, wrap in gauze and vet wrap. I try to repeat it every day or two.We have had our fair share of bumble and it sucks. This is a good approach and has worked very well for us. Lately we've taken a minimalist approach - washing the feet, just getting the scab out or off (depending on the type of scab) with a razor blade/scalpel and tweezers to expose the hole. We no longer do any exploratory and try to get a "plug." Express pus by squishing foot, if needed, then wash with chlorhexidine soap, packing with triple antibiotic ointment (neosporin). Cover the foot externally with neosporin, then wrap, if possible and put them in a clean, dry cage with dim lights. So far it seems to be working as well as the more exploratory "surgery" but we don't yet have enough data to say for sure.
Right now we have a turkey hen in our bumble hospital. Her feet were awful. I was embarrassed we let it go as long as we did but if you needed 3 people to help with a chicken imagine what a turkey is like. Her feet were very swollen, she could barely walk. We thought we'd try to fix her, but knew culling was likely. We did the minimalist approach above... because if you haven't been slapped in the face with panicked turkey wings, you're really missing out... and her feet are a lot better. They're not perfect, but the major infection is gone. We will maybe have to cut into one of the feet again - it hadn't formed a real bumble scab so it was difficult to deal with. She doesn't let us wrap them well and as soon as she gets free from us (even if the lights are off) she works the bandages off. So we even don't bandage her. She got the majorly minimalist approach.
So what causes bumble to begin with? I always check my birds feet, but forget what actually causes it.
And yes, the lovely turkey slap! My spring hatch last year, I had only one turkey make it. She lived with the chickens for a while, and did not like to go in the coop at night. She would go in at dark if they were already in the run, but if I had let them free range, she would roost on top of the run. I'd have to grab her down at dusk to put her inside. One evening I went to grab her as I always did, and she surprised me with an awesome left hook! My cheekbone hurt for days!
A cut or a scrape causes bacteria to get in the foot and then start the infective process.
We have soooo many rocks here - there's really no "soil" so I'm thinking that is why we see it a lot. Most of our bumbles resolve on their own without intervention.
This is my first year with bumblefoot.We have never had a bumble.
Las Vegas, NV, has a huge Santa Run every year to benefit Crones Disease research. Thousands of Santas in the wee hours of the dawn down The Strip.