What to do with this foot?

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So, we were doing really well and almost all of Tippie’s toes are clear to her nails. You can really see how the mineral oil/Vaseline mix penetrates and also even moisturizes while I massage it into her toes.

The dead crusty scales were coming off so well... and then on the really bad toe, last two pictures before the setback one, the dead scales which wrap all around the toe tip started to peel off!

I thought we were pretty much done, and then, the half peeled scales were still attached to live skin. She jerked her foot. I took her into better light, trimmed off the hanging but dead scales with some cuticle scissors, and we went back to the coop to blu-kote it up.

I applied a bit of pressure, it’s really not much bleeding, and I took the photo mostly so I could see where to spray her better. She’s doing fine, I’ve got some blu-kote on my face... that’s new, normally just my fingers and arms end up purple, but the angle I had to use to get the bottom of her foot while holding her myself was a bit awkward.

So that’s where we ended up today... all in all I’m happy with our progress, and a little angry at myself for hurting her some, even if it is to make things better in the long run. I should’ve waited until tomorrow and worked in better light, but we were making so much progress and it was all going so smoothly... Tippie is doing just fine though, and we should have this all done with in the next week or so, I’m guessing.
 
Slightly off-topic...
(PLEASE don't troll me for this next question--it's an old farmer's tale-literally:old)

Are bands (like elastrator bands for bull calves) ever used for these type of toe amputations? and, no, I've never used them for this--I removed frostbitten toes the old fashioned way :sick but from personal experience I know that once the blood flow to an area is completely stopped, it makes appendages much easier to remove(less pain/no blood). I once-upon-a-time knew an old farmer who was considering using banding for his pup's tails-I was 10. I didn't ask; I didn't want to know! However this is the same guy that when told Bob the cat needed to go to the vet for a little snip-snip told Grandma to bring him a boot. He grabbed the boot, stuck poor Bob in headfirst, and, well, Bob never did go to the vet...never went near that pair of barn boots again either!
 
I don’t think that they are small enough for a chicken toe... we did use that to remove an infected udder remanent on an ewe with severe mastitis, so they can be used for more than just emasculating... To remove our lambs tails we use the berdizzo, faster, cleaner and more precise, without the risks of sepsis.

I’m not sure how I would go about a toe amputation, especially with a not completely dead toe. We don’t have problems with frostbite here, and I’ve never had to face anything like this before. Maybe someone with more experience will share a thread or post on this?
 
It's been my experience that it's easiest just to cut the toes off with a pair of clean, sharp scissors or diagonal cutters. Using something like small rubber band would probably be more painful, and I say this because the goat I had suffered for weeks before his testicles fell off after being banded.
 
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Last week was the 12 days of Dr. Pol vet tv shows that I binge-watched. Yes, I have a little extra time on my hands in winter. They use bands a lot on things to amputate them. He says they hurt for awhile, but then the tissue becomes numb after circulation is interrupted for several hours. Then it takes times for the necrotic tissue to fall off. He does this a lot for pig prolapses where he inserts a short tube into the anus, and bands the prolapse with those castration bands. It seems to work well, since the other vets use this technique. I forget what else they do with bands, but there are some other uses besides castrating.

I had to Google what a berdizzo/burdizzo is. Yes Dr, Pol uses the crush emasculators as well on horses frequently. My husband always cringes during those episodes.
 

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