https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XLjR...relsandmorellc
Here is a good video for showing feeding technique, with a number of good pointers.
Note, using 1 cc, 1 ml syringe helps to reduce the chance of the baby aspirating.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XLjR...relsandmorellc
Here is a good video for showing feeding technique, with a number of good pointers.
Note, using 1 cc, 1 ml syringe helps to reduce the chance of the baby aspirating.
I am using a 3cc syringe. I fill it up twice and he's been doing really well with that amount. His poop is still a little soft but its getting some shape to it so thats something. If the diarrhea isnt gone completely by the end of his antibiotics then ill start him on the dia-stat.
I am glad to hear that he is doing better.
A one CC syringe with an o-ring will give much more precise control. The chances of aspiration will be much lower.
With a 3 cc syringe a lot of fluid can come out when the plunger is pushed, especially if it does not have an o-ring. With these type of syringes the plunger can hang up then you push hard and too much fluid comes out.
The squirrel may be getting diarrhea because it is being fed too much. They are gluttons. They are wired to eat fast, to compete with siblings for food. They are not the best judge of how much they should eat.
You really need a scale to weigh the squirrel to determine the appropriate amount of formula to be given or you are playing with fire, rolling the dice with the squirrel's life. (The number one cause of death for squirrels being taken care of by first time caretakers is inhalation/aspiration pneumonia and it acts so fast that you probably won't recognize the symptoms fast enough and treat it fast enough.)
Do you use a nipple with the syringe?
A food scale will set you back less than $20, certainly a lot cheaper than a visit to the vet.
At 120gr. he should be eating between 6cc-8.5cc at each feeding.
Squirrels weights vary depending on the part of the country you’re in. Northern gray squirrels weigh much more than a Florida grays. What you want to see is a steady weight gain, which is why a scale and weighing them on a regular basis is so important. Keep a log of how much he eats at each feeding and weigh him at the same time each day, preferably after pottying him.
Rock Monkey (10-08-2020)
You can give him an occasional nut in a shell, antlers, calcium chews, dried marrow bones. I buy the marrow bones for my dog. Once he’s eaten the marrow out and they dry out some I put them on broken limbs in my oak tree and in my release cage. The wilds and my babies all chew on them. It’s a win-win....they wear their teeth down and they get calcium in the process.
It doesn’t really matter what type of nut. Almonds have a softer shell and Hickory nuts have a very hard shell. Walnuts are fairly hard and thick and pecans and hazelnuts medium hardness.
Preferably the nut should be a shell. Learning the best way to open one is learned skill.
Black (American) walnuts can often be found on the ground, most people are happy to give them away. It will probably be a while before he can manage one of those. The shell is super thick. But one will make a good toy in the meantime.
Certainly no nuts with added anything, like you usually find in the grocery store.
Avoid acorns or Brazil nuts.