As you can see by the title, my 2 year old was wandering around my room, and discovered a green gummy bear that was on the floor. I noticed her struggling to get something down and saw half of the bear hanging out of her mouth. At this point I rushed over and tried to pry her mouth open to get the thing out. Unfortunately she thrashed, swallowed the bear, and ended up biting my finger. She's still a little testy from testy from the incident, but otherwise has been acting normal since. I gave her some water, and now she's contently sitting under her lamp.
I guess at this point I'm just wondering whether or not it would be worth it to take her to the vet in response to this incident. I was thinking of giving her some pumpkin or a couple drops of olive oil to get her digestive system going so she can pass the bear. Anyone have any input, as I'm now worried about my little lady?
Hi there, she should be fine. Adult dragons have swallowed everything from an entire sandwich bag [ which came out after about 3-4 weeks even though he poo'd in between ] to small rocks, rubber bands, coins, etc. The coins are the only things that I've read of that caused problems. I believe one dragon passed a dime but another swallowed a penny ,had surgery + died after surgery.
But your dragon should be fine, feed her as usual but slightly less amounts and give her " natural laxatives " like baby food prunes, squash, sweet potato and/or canned pumkin. Add a few drops of veg. oil or raw honey to any of those. No need for a vet, just be patient because it may take a week or so.
I also suggest offering drops of water on her nose to lick up. The extra water may help the gummy to dissolve and pass through. It may also help dilute the high levels of sugar which aren't healthy for them. I agree that she should be OK though.
She will be fine! Adults are notorious for eating things they aren't supposed to. I agree, she
probably got excited with you trying to take something out of her mouth. LOL I'm sure that
she shouldn't have any trouble passing it through.