Showing posts with label How to use Therapeutic clays on poultry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How to use Therapeutic clays on poultry. Show all posts

Green Clay Treatment - Wound on a Pigeon Including Pierced Crop Part 3

In Part One and Part Two of these articles respectively we looked at dealing with the emotional stress aspect of the injury and then moved on to coping with the pain, potential bacterial infection and immune system response element. Now I'm going to share how I sealed and healed the wound with therapeutic clay.

Therapeutic Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound on a Pigeon Including Pierced Crop


The first thing to understand if you haven't used it before is, that because of the way it reacts with other substances, clay has a protocol that must be followed.

Therapeutic Clay - Its properties and how to use it on wounds

Treating wound, pierced crop with therapeutic clay
Therapeutic clay is one of the most amazing, natural minerals, its primary use being as a detox for the body. It can remove bacteria from wounds and heavy metals and even radiation from the body, with both internal and external application. I have also used it to great effect on sprains and sciatica and a friend has used it to successfully set her dog's broken leg! Here I'm using Montmorillonite aka French Green Clay but you should check out the clays in your local area, as there are a whole raft of therapeutic ones if you are in the UK, where I was when I first started using clay then you can buy the Cattier Clay I use here on-line:


Macaws eating green clay to counteract alkaloids Always choose a good quality, sun-dried, powdered clay from a reputable source, it is not expensive and if stored correctly will keep well.  Normally a clay compress is only left on until dry. However, with my pigeon, I was going to keep the clay on for as long as possible to cover the wound, seal the hole in the crop and to avoid infection.

On the left is an amazing photo of Macaws, showing how they have learned to use the properties of clay, as a way of getting nutrition from potentially toxic foods. The clay envelopes the alkaloids present in the seeds of many of the fruits they consume, toxins which are particularly concentrated in the dry season and passes them out of the body in the parrots' droppings!

Clay Protocol

Mixing: always mix by putting the powder into the recipient first and then adding water, this is the easiest way to gauge exactly how much water to use.

Mixing Bowls: due to the clays ability to remove toxins, only stable substances such as glass or porcelain should be used to mix the clay. So do not use metal (see following paragraph). Above all do not use plastic the clay will withdraw toxins from it.

Spoons: do not use silverware i.e. metal spoons, as this will have an ionic reaction on the clay that is in direct contact with it. Certainly this is a tiny amount but even so it is better to use a wooden, glass or ceramic spoon. I save lolly sticks for the very purpose of using them with clay. We were very lucky the other day to be at a friend's house, when we were all offered organic ices, I went around collecting up the sticks!

Water: you should also use good quality water too, in our case this means mineral water as our tap water is loaded with nitrates!

Keep the body hydrated: by the very action of the clay it will draw water from the body.

Covering: the clay will react with the air around it and obviously dry accordingly, in order to concentrate the clay onto the wound and to allow it to dry more slowly and thus be active longer, the former can be covered with an organic fabric such as a pad or in my case piece of old Tee-shirt.

Clay Treatment

Therapeutic Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound on a Pigeon Including Pierced Crop

Day 1 

Here I'm using my lolly stick to add on the clay. It was important that I had already given the pigeon his drink of electrolyte and he had drunk well, thus was hydrated. I didn't want to give him any more significant quantities of liquid, which might leak out through the clay until it had begun to set.

Therapeutic Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound on a Pigeon Including Pierced Crop


Day 2 

Below, showing the state of the clay on the following day after the injury and now with the clay dried and thus I could risk giving a longer drink.

Clay Treatment  - Horrific Wound on a Pigeon Including Pierced Crop


Keeping bird hydrated - Green Clay Treatment - Wounded Pigeon
Therapeutic Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound on a Pigeon Including Pierced Crop
At this point I was hand-feeding my pigeon as he was still disinclined to eat. Whether it was hurting him to bend or that the descent of the food going into his crop was causing him a problem. However, when I hand-fed him he swallowed, so I took that as a sign of acceptance! I also believe that it is not too fanciful a hypothesis that in times of emotional upheaval a bird will naturally 'go back to Mama', thus my hand feeding him gave him that contact he would have had as a baby.

Day 4

The wound looks ever better and is healing well. The skin around the edges of the clay looks clean and a healthy pink. The pigeon seems at ease and was eating on his own but just in case this was still an issue I held the food up at a convenient level. N.B.  because I thought this might be painful and/or stressful I am feeding him in low lighting and in the kitchen near the warmth of the wood cooker.



Day 5

The wound is obviously continuing to seal and heal. I can neither see nor more importantly, smell, any sign of infection.

Therapeutic Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound on a Pigeon Including Pierced Crop

Therapeutic Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound on a Pigeon Including Pierced Crop


Furthermore, he now can bend without any problem and in fact began to eat food at floor level.

Day 6

Therapeutic Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound on a Pigeon Including Pierced Crop


With the pigeon's continued improvement he began to get more 'uppity' and to start pulling at the clay. So I'd had to add another thin clay layer which kept everything sealed around the edges of the wound. It is also quite natural as the pigeon improves that he will want to preen his feathers and this could be part of the problem and why he has 'accidentally' removed small amounts of clay. I gave him the benefit of the doubt!

Day 9

Therapeutic Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound on a Pigeon Including Pierced Crop

With the drying out of the clay which was probably slightly itchy, my pigeon which was a lot younger, more skittish and inquisitive than the other pigeon I had treated, had begun to remove the clay again. To try and stop this I made him a 'Tee-shirt' out of an old organic one of mine. On this day he also feels confident enough to face the World once more but I place him in an arbor to give him an additional feeling of safety.

Amazing Results Therapeutic Green Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound

Day 13

Amazing Results Therapeutic Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound


The Tee-shirt being rather an unwieldy garment, I took it off with the result that the pigeon manages to remove all the clay. Happily the wound looks fine. N.B. I have never removed dried clay from any bird I have treated as I would be totally afraid of harming it. Done at its own pace, if and when it wants to remove it, is OK by me!

Day 15 

Amazing Results Therapeutic Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound

Here by comparing the above with the picture at the top of this article you can see exactly the amazing healing power of clay in just over a fortnight!

Day 27

Amazing Results Green Clay Treatment - Horrific Wound
In just under four weeks from the day of the attack the pigeon's new feathers have grown and the wound has all but disappeared.

Here are the two films:




Thanks for dropping by and do feel free to share experiences or ask for further information in the comment section. If you have enjoyed this piece and found it useful think about sharing it with your family and friends, on social media and also maybe about joining this blog and/or subscribing to my Youtube channel or even supporting us on Patreon or
It all helps to keep me going!

Until next time, all the very best from Normandie! Sues

RELATED ARTICLES


Initial Treatment Badly Injured Pigeon with pierced crop

I've got to be one of the World's worse nurses. However, I needed to assess the situation and merit my pigeon's obvious confidence..read more

Badly Injured Pigeon with pierced crop 2 - Essential Oils

How to use EOs as an antimicrobial, pain-killer and immune system support on a nasty wound and why I use organic cotton products..read more

Using therapeutic clay on a deep infected pigeon wound

Montmorillonite or (French Green) clay is one of the most amazing natural minerals and around the World there are similar therapeutic-grade clays for you to use, wherever you may live...read more



Using Green Clay, Organic GSE & Essential Oil to Successfully Treat an Infected Wound

This is a beautiful female sparrow hawk, which I had just disentangled from the hedge after she had taken a low flight path to escape from me, when I caught her pinning down one of my fantails.

Sparrow hawks - damage limitation


It is the distinctively coloured female of the species, who preys on much larger birds than her name suggests. The male lives up to his name, preying on sparrows and smaller birds. I have witnessed the way the male attacks, launching himself at groups of sparrows perched in the bay tree in our garden.  It's a strange tactic, he slams into the tree scattering the poor sparrows in all directions. The female uses the same approach on my fantails, she waits until there is a group displaying on the roof and then swoops in scattering them and knocking one to the ground.
The Female of the Species 
'deadlier than the male'

Birds of prey are protected, here but I wouldn't want to harm them anyway. By the time this second picture was taken, I'd managed to get my gloves on. As the bird was in shock, I'd given her a little organic sugar in water. She repaid me by coming round and squeezing my fingers with her claws, ouch! We then took her in the car to a beautiful wood away from human habitation and let her go.
 
Birds of prey, like rats and other predators of poultry are opportunists and my fantails parading up and down the roof ridge are invitation enough. The whole of our garden has been planned to give our birds as much protection as possible to free range. My strategy has always been to plant up our garden in such a way as to prevent easy access by fly-through and thereby also give my fantails, if ever attacked, the chance to escape. Knowing my birds as I do, I am well aware of that avian memory retention is better than that of most humans. A sparrowhawk, may return after I have scared her off, alerted by my hens and cockerels, to see if she can get the abandoned prey but she rarely makes a third mistake with the hens and I on duty.

The brave little pigeon who got away


There's not much comparison really when you think of the fighting capabilities of fantail versus sparrow hawk. I hadn't associated this young female seemingly sitting on eggs under the workbench with the drops of blood and few feathers on the stone path in front of the workshop. Unfortunately I just presumed this was evidence a new sparrowhawk had carried off one of my birds and so I left her alone for a couple of days. By the third day however, as I hadn't seen her come out to eat, I thought I should remove her from the nest. Young birds can become fixated on sitting and forget to look after themselves. It was then that I found that she had been badly injured under her wing and this left untreated had become infected. Perhaps if she had been out and about instead of cowering under the bench the wound would have begun to dry and heal, even though deep, but now it needed intervention. This is what I did and I hope if this ever happens to one of your birds it will be of help. 

Interestingly enough she had obviously not been affected by stress, although a previous attack had left a fantail flat out on the ground and completely unable to stand purely from stress. In this case I had administered emergency stress treatment, you can find that HERE It can be used on all sorts of poultry and I have also used it with great success on rescued wild birds.

Step-by-step treatment

Montmorillonite - Illite or (French Green) clay is one of the most amazing natural minerals, its primary use is as a detox for the body. Always choose a good quality sun-dried, powdered clay from a reputable source, it is not expensive.

 
It can remove bacteria from wounds and also pull heavy metals and even radiation from the body, with both internal and external application. I have also used it to great effect on sprains and a friend has used it to successfully set her dog's broken leg!  



In the case of my pigeon, she was in such a bad state that I didn't consider how I would remove the clay. Normally a clay compress is only left on until dry. I just knew I needed to pack the wound in her side. This was both to seal it from further infection and remove that which already was within the wounded tissue.
Clay is always mixed by putting the powder into the recipient first and then adding water, this is the easiest way to gauge exactly how much water to use. Due to the clays ability to remove toxins, only stable substances such as glass or porcelain should be used to mix the clay, above all do not use plastic.  You should also use good quality water too!

Update - I have since found, that the metal spoon will have an ionic reaction on the clay that is in direct contact with it - a tiny amount but even so in future I will use a wooden, glass or ceramic spoon.


In this case of an infected wound I would also add a few of drops of organic grapefruit seed extract to the clay and mineral water mix. This is a powerful relatively recently-discovered naturally occurring antibiotic, it is one of the few things which can control MRSA. Mix this in well to your clay mix so it is evenly distributed.



Just a word about this pigeon, I knew from the start, despite the gravity of her wound that she was OK  because she was eating and drinking and responding to  me in a normal manner.


There are essential oils which can be used as an initial cleanser for wounds, these are Lavender (lavandula angustifolia)  and Tea tree, which I will deal with in another post, these also have the ability to anaesthetise and deaden pain. For the post on cleansing wounds follow this: LINK
I wasn't sure, as the wound was so deep and infected, if it would clear just with the one treatment. On the next day after treatment, I could still smell the wound, therefore, I decided to follow up with Essential Oil of Tea Tree. This is a powerful broad spectrum antibacterial agent and a good one to have in your first aid kit. Always get a good quality pure oil, mine is organic from a local company. It is worth paying a little extra and remember you are only using so few drops for each treatment, a small 10ml bottle will contain approximately 200 plus drops.

Following advice from my sister, who has used Tea Tree on her cattle I fed it directly into the wound, a couple of drops on the clay and one down the side. Tea Tree is one of the few E.Os that can be used neat in an emergency. Personally, I would never use more than three drops of E.O. on a bird per day. Most of my birds are bantams thus with low body weights. Also and as with human adults I would not treat for longer than five days at a time without a break. I have never in my experience had to treat after the five days.

My next problem, when after three days of treatment with Tea Tree the wound was clear of infection, was how to remove the clay. Luckily the problem was solved for me as the pigeon cleaned it off herself! She was left with a scab a fraction of the size of the wound surrounded by healthy looking pink skin. I was so pleased that something so terrible and deep had healed so well and that she could still and does fly.  I did notice however, that she was quite careful about bathing for some time even after the wound had healed.

Here she is at the pigeon lido wondering whether to go for a dip!



If you'd like to watch the film.


Thanks for dropping by and do feel free to share experiences or ask for further information in the comment section. If you have enjoyed this piece and found it useful think about sharing it with your family and friends, on social media and also maybe about joining this blog and/or subscribing to my YoutubeOdysee  or BitChute Channel or even supporting us on Patreon or

It all helps to keep me going!


Until next time, all the very best from sunny Normandie! 

Sue
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© 2013 Sue Cross

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©  Sue Cross 2016