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Thanks. I noticed that in the past few hours she hasnt really pooped but maybe once.If she's pooping, it's a good thing. I would get her into a vet asap, though, because it could get stuck. **Hugs** Keep us updated on her condition, plz!
Thanks for replying!No, i dont think shes egg bound. If she was, she would be in extreme distress. She would be in the floor of the cage or in the nestbox straining and wouldl lose use of her legs as the egg presses on the vessels and nerves to her legs. Then her organs, especially kidneys would start to fail and she would die within hours without emergency avian vet care and that may not save her.
After and during when budgies lay eggs the butt often gets puffy and red like that especially the first egg(s). The big watery poops are normal for an egg laying hen. The poops can get so big they look like big parrot poops! Please feed her a balanced diet and add either egg food moistened with water or plain scrambled eggs a few times a week to give her protein, and a good calcium vitamin D supplement in her water while she's laying eggs. Also make sure she has lots of cuttlebones and a mineral block to replace calcium lost to forming eggshells. If she depletes her calcium stores laying a lot of eggs she will be more prone to egg binding. Older hens are also more prone to egg binding and at 5 she is approaching past her prime for egg laying. A budgie that's out of shape and overweight is also much more likely to get egg bound. Too much fat in the abdomen crowds the internal organs and can interfere with the passage of the egg down the oviduct. If she's out of shape from lack of exercise her muscles may not be strong enough to lay eggs when combined with other risk factors.
Egg binding is a life threatening emergency. If she shows any of the distress associated with egg binding, please take her to an avian vet right away. If you can't, admininister a few drops of liquid calcium supplement straight, directly into her beak, to raise her blood calcium levels quickly to help the muscles to contract strongly and expel the egg. Adequate blood calcium is essential for muscle contraction and it gets depleted quickly when the egg doesn't pass readily. Raising the calcium levels quickly may be just what she needs to pass the egg. You can also try putting a lubricant like olive oil or ky jelly on her vent. Putting her in a very warm moist environment like a steamy bathroom may help.
At the vet they will likely xray to locate the egg and, they may give her a Pitocin-like injection to make the muscles of the oviduct contract strongly, and or a calcium injection. They may also try to manually deliver the egg by pressing carefully behind it and pushing it out the vent. This is a dangerous procedure that can break the egg causing massive internal injury and infection (egg peritonitis). Don't try this at home! They may also insert a needle into the egg itself and draw out the egg contents before assisting in delivery of the collapsed egg. These interventions are much safer on large birds like large parrots and chickens not budgies.
I hope you never have an egg bound budgie. It really is a horrible way for her to die.