Jabba has pinworms. It's a hazard of feeding him crickets, as not all livefood suppliers ensure their crickets are parasite-free. He had a visit to the vet last week, and didn't disgrace himself as Dooya was wont to do, and is in rude health other than the worms and a little bit of junk in the trunk to shift.
The favoured treatment for pinworms is 0.2ml of Panacur once a day for three days. So this is how to go about giving meds to a 120g bruiser such as Jabba.
The favoured treatment for pinworms is 0.2ml of Panacur once a day for three days. So this is how to go about giving meds to a 120g bruiser such as Jabba.
- Assemble syringe and medicine.
- Open vivarium and place hand in for gecko to crawl onto.
- Remove escaping locust from arm.
- Try to grab gecko as he sprints past hand to the warm hide.
- Lift up warm hide to extract gecko.
- Retrieve gecko from behind the cold hide.
- Sit down on sofa with gecko on lap.
- Take up medicine in syringe.
- Retrieve gecko from between your shoulder blades.
- Hold gecko gently but firmly in right hand.
- Mop up urine from t-shirt.
- Gently stroke gecko's mouth to encourage him to open it.
- Gently stroke gecko's mouth to encourage him to let go of your finger.
- Gently stroke gecko's mouth again.
- Slide syringe with catheter into mouth.
- Retrieve syringe from the other side of the living room and gecko from down the side of the sofa.
- Hold gecko gently but firmly in right hand.
- Mop up further urine all over jeans.
- Gently stroke gecko's mouth to encourage him to open it.
- Persuade spouse to slide syringe in.
- Inject medication.
- Gently stroke gecko's mouth to encourage him to let go of the catheter.
- Retrieve gecko from underneath cushion.
- Return gecko to vivarium.
- Chase escapee locusts around living room.
- Nurse wounds.
Is this a fantastic case of convergence or have you seen this one Julia?
ReplyDeletehttp://twaddle.posterous.com/how-to-give-a-cat-a-pill
I have seen that one, and there is more than a little nod to that. Also Melissa Kaplan has How to give your iguana oral medications with a syringe. Clearly there are plenty of commonalities between mammals and reptiles when it comes to medication...
ReplyDeleteThis one had me laughing. I gotta say, I've never seen a leopard gecko that big!
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