How to heal calluses? Please take a look (picture)

danbrah

New member
Sep 18, 2013
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Hello, ever since I adopted my African Grey I have noticed that she has callous, it has at least been there for the couple months I had her; here is a recent picture of today.
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When I asked the vet about this, he simply said it was calluses and didn't tell me anything else.

I do have a Safety pumice perch and a cement perch for her however she doesn't stand on these for long. She is usually on dragon wood and manzanita wood.

Does her feet look ok? I have heard of something called bumble feet I think and it sounds very dangerous so I am afraid this can get worse. :/
 
Firstly, here is a definition for bumble foot... BirdVeterinarian

Callouses are a reaction to repeated friction to a skin surface. It can also happen in certain cases of fungal infections in humans like athletes foot.

If it truly is a case of callouses, then your avian vet should be able to grind them down with the same kind of dremmel they use for grooming beaks.
 
if its just callouses, a daily rub of aloe vera (from the plant please, or the 100% natural stuff--NOT the stuff for sunburns for humans...) or pure coconut oil would help, if she'll let you. if you use the coconut oil, dont use a lot, just enough to soothe the foot. too much might make it slippery for her to perch.
 
Doesn't look bad to me at all. As long as you don't see her having pain or anything I don't see a problem.
 
I second the recommendation for aloe...

And I've seen some of the rougher sandpaper/concrete type perches cause these types of friction irritations.

As long as there is no infection you should be fine.
 
Thanks for starting this thread. I noticed the same thing on Percy's foot today and was just coming to ask what it could be. I have recently replaced one of his perches with a sandpapery one so that must be the culprit. He loooves foot massages so applying aloe shouldn't be a problem.:D
 
Remove *ALL* hard surfaced perches (pumice, cement, wood...) and replace with cotton rope perches.

This may help tell you if it's a perch related issue or not.
 

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