Always aim for the sweet spot warm the ears up first, you can put rice in a sock and put it in the microwave, test it on the inside of your wrist to be sure it's not to hot, like you would test a babies bottle. You can fill a pill bottle with warm water and roll it on the ears also.Just keep rubbing the ears with your fingers to warm them up
6. As the ears get used to bleeding and grow more capilares, it gets easier to get the amount of blood you need on the first try. If he won’t stand still, you can get the blood onto a clean finger nail and test from there.
When you do get some blood you can try milking the ear.
Get you finger and gently push up toward the blood , more will appear
You will put the cotton round behind his ear in case you poke your finger, after you are done testing you will fold the cotton round over his ear to stop the bleeding , press gently for about 10 or 20 seconds until it stops
Get 26 or 28 gauge lancets
A lot of us use the lancets to test freehand notthe lancing device
I find it better to see where I'm aiming
Look at the lancet under a light and you will see one side is curved upward, that's the side you want to poke with
Try putting a thin layer of Vaseline on the ear so the blood will bead up
Be sure you have the U-100 syringes with the half unit markings since we adjust the dose by 0.25 units at a time .
If you don't have them I can tell you where to get them
Try to start rubbing Bella's ears to get her used to it.
Give her a low carb treat such as freeze dried . Link below . before testing her and after so she will associate getting a treat when you test her. Bring her to the same spot when you test her .
One thing we usually give the same dose of insulin both for the day and night cycle
https://felinediabetes.com/FDMB/threads/hometesting-links-and-tips.287/
Click on this link and look at post #6. Numbers are to the right
You can get any freeze dried treats ,information is there
https://www.felinediabetes.com/FDMB/threads/brand-new-many-questions-3.255627/#post-2878703
Freeze dried treats that only contain one ingredient (the meat or fish) is zero carb and fine to feed to a diabetes