She had a ball at school. I took her in before school opened so it wasn't too busy (the perks of being Chair of Governors - having the code to the door and being able to just wander in at will). The staff made loads of fuss over her and her tail never stopped wagging. She was back in the car by the time parents started arriving though - I think she would have found all the children too overwhelming.
She went for a nice long walk (well short compared to her normal walks but long compared to recent walks) through the woods and then onto the vets. The vet weighed her - she weighed 12.45 kilos - when they weighed her the day after the accident she was 17.25 kilos so she has lost loads. You can't really tell by looking at her but when you stroke her she is just a little bag of bones. She became quite stressed at the vets and was sick - just horrible white foamy stuff but it did mean that the vet got to see her being sick (the pacing and the pawing at the ground) and got to have a good look through it (yuk). She wasn't concerned - she said the pacing and the pawing are because her little tummy hurts and the white froth is the fluid in her stomach - there was no actual food in there.
She had the jab - which obviously stung a little and then when we got home she slept. I went out for my lunch and started to panic that she was going to have a reaction to the jab and I would come home and find her dead on the sofa.
Anyway, I got home and she was fine and more than happy to go out for a walk up and down the road. I have borrowed a retractable lead from my friend so she has a little more freedom than just on our short lead.
She has had 3 more bowls of food - only small portions. Two dessert spoons of the ID food (high nutrients) watered down very thin. She ate them and kept them down fine. She can have some more later on this evening. I am going to stick to lots of small portions for a while and slowly start to build up the quantity and the thickness.
The ID food is so expensive - £2 per tin. We need to aim to give her between 1 and 1.5 tins a day (although at the moment she is on about 3/4 to 1 tin a day as I just don't want to overload her little tummy). The vet has said that we can change her to Chappy if we want but as this is a special gastric food I would like to keep her on it for a couple of weeks at least to see how she keeps it down and for her to start putting some weight on.
We don't have to go back until Thursday for the dressing change (the vet never looked at the leg at all today as they are happy with that) and I will ask them to weigh her at the same time. I will try to monitor her weight on the calendar just so I know that it is going up rather than down!
In herself she is fine - she is sprawled out on the sofa watching Tracey Beaker with the girls at the moment.