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Birds
My cat hurt a bird and it is still alive. It's leg is broke & its wings are broke. What will happen to the bird?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It is in serious pain and will not recover.
With luck it will have died by the time you read this. If not, please kill it as soon as possible. The quickest and kindest way is to put it on hard flat ground and stamp hard on its head (do not shut your eyes until afterwards, or you will probably miss). Make sure it does not flutter off when you put it down -- weigh it down with something.
I'm sorry if this sounds brutal, but this bird needs you to be brave and end its pain quickly.
Ouisch -
It may not be impossible to keep a wild bird long enough for broken wings and legs to heal.
But is that really "humane"? I don't think so. Confine a wild bird in a small space, with its greatest enemy leering at it every day from a couple of feet away? Then probably to die after a few days anyway? Or never to heal well enough to be released? I think this is a case where being "kind" is in fact probably very cruel.
I suspect that if both a leg and a wing are broken I'd guess there's probably much else wrong with it too.
I might try it with cage birds or poultry -- but even then only for an injury which was very straightforward indeed, or where the bird was not in any distress. For example, I've often stitched up hens ripped open by the fox, and have had them recover fully despite holes in their skin you could put your hand in -- but I'd not put a wild bird through that.
You should have let the cat eat it!!! Now you've deprived your mog of a decent meal for no reason and thereby wasted that bird's life. You've interfered with the balance of nature and now the planet is doomed. What your cat did was perfectly natural and now you've upset nature.
Why don't cat food manufacturers do sparrow or mouse flavour?
Don't worry about it. The vet fixed up that bird with splints on its wing and leg. It's convalescing in a deck chair under a sun lamp and will soon be flying happily off to meet its mate and have a nestful of chicks.