Showing posts with label chicken keeping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chicken keeping. Show all posts

Sunday, February 20, 2022

H5N1: Avian Flu

Well folks it's here. I know people are suffering from Covid Fatigue and since January we have been shouting from the rooftops about avian flu.

What is it? 

It's highly pathogenic, which means, it spreads quickly. It's highly contagious. This is H5N1 and is the Eurasian Strain. It's carried by wild birds as they migrate and travel from yard to yard, pond to pond.

What does it affect?

All birds. It can present as a a respiratory illness or sudden death. As we know, prey animals work hard to not show symptoms of weakness until they can't hide them anymore. Your birds will stop drinking and get very quiet. It can also make a jump to humans, but right now we're not worried about that. Let's focus on our birds.

What are the risks?

Your flock. Your neighbors flock. Your pets. The government will destroy your entire flock if your birds test positive. As someone who just lost her dog of 14 years, I personally cannot handle another loss of my pets.

What is it not?

I'm all for a great conspiracy theory. I enjoy reading about how the earth is hollow, there's a secret society controlling everyone on the planet, birds aren't real, etc. THIS IS NOT A CONSPIRACY THEORY. The government lost billions the last time this happened in 2016. 

Ok...so how do we handle this?

Say it with me now. BIOSECURITY

Biosecurity is the practice of keeping out germs and pathogens from your folk but also in your life. You have been practicing (hopefully) biosecurity for yourself your entire life. Wash your hands after using the bathroom, don't pick your nose, if you sneeze or cough cover your mouth, sanitize your house, clean up dust...you get the point. These are the beginnings of biosecurity that we teach to help humans keep from getting sick.

Guess what? These apply to your backyard flocks.

Well Rai, this is going to be expensive. Nope. It doesn't have to be. None of this needs to be Pinterest level flock down. No one has time for it and hopefully some of these extreme measures will be temporary. It's time for farming or redneck engineering. Every single one of us has a unique situation when it comes to our set ups. No one is the same. So you will have to get creative.

You want your run to be covered and free from wild birds. You can use tarps, umbrellas, whatever you have to cover your run. We don't want wild bird poop or dander in our runs. That's an easy way to start. Your birds will need to enter flock down. That means no free range. I have hardware cloth on the bottom of my run, but it's not really covered. I've limited where my girls can go in their run for now and they only have access to where it's covered. I have hawk netting that's attached to my hardware cloth. However, I purchased inexpensive bird netting to go on top of that. You can use chicken wire, you can use that. I did have to take my netting down because of the wind storms that rolled through here. But it's going back up.

Zip ties are your best friend. Seriously. My run area looks like something from M.A.S.H. for those of you old enough to remember that!

My feeders and waterers are wild bird proof. If you have a wild bird proof run, then this will be less of an issue. But I hate mice and don't want pests in my run at all, so mine are wild bird proof (nipple drinkers and treadle feeders). 

I also have Camp Clucker, which is the tent set up I have in my house for the girls. That's another article for another time.

Let's talk clothes and shoes

One of my students was playing on the floor one day not far from the bathrooms. I asked him if he really wanted to be on the floor there, especially since his face was on the tiles. He looked at me like I was crazy until I reminded him that people walk into the bathroom. They track all the germs and nastiness on their shoes to other parts of the building. Yup this applies to backyard poultry too. 

Let's face it. Caring for animals is not about fashion at all. But knowing how to use your clothes for biosecurity is helpful. For example I have shoes that are just for my coop area. I had to tighten up by scraping the shoes and dipping them in a solution of equal parts water and bleach. Dip only works if you have scraped off any poop or mud from your shoes. Some people use hospital booties if they are going from coop to coop. 

I have coop only clothing. These are my old barn clothes, and they are...loved to say the least. I only wear these clothes in my run. I don't want to track in wild bird poop, dander, or even a virus from a feed store. I hit up a feed store only on my way home from work. Why? I heard the best tip, wear your fancy clothes and shoes to the feed store. You won't be taking them out to your chicken run. 

What happens if I have a sick bird?

You can get your birds tested. 

If a bird dies, you should send it for a necropsy. Your state has laboratories dedicated to this. I'll include Maryland's info at the end of this article.

What else can I do to protect my flock?

Have a closed flock. Don't bring people over to chill with your birds.
Don't bring your birds to feed stores.
Don't go to poultry swaps. 
Don't bring in new birds without an extensive quarantine. 
Only purchase from NPIP. 
Document everything with photos, time stamps, etc. 
Follow everything they suggest on defend the flock 
Wash your hands.


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Friday, January 28, 2022

Common Myths About Chickens

 Baltimore County did it! They were able to get a law passed that allows people who are under an acre to have backyard chickens!

So let's talk myths!

Chickens are LOUD

Nope. Chickens are NOT silent. They do make a variety of noise. The egg song sings out a few times a day as hens announce they have given birth! Sometimes the flock will join in, sometimes no egg song is sung. Even still, chickens aren't any louder than a barking dog. My girls communicate with each other through kind of a bubble talk. Lots of buck buck sounds. I have found though that happy chickens, are quiet chickens. 

Roosters do crow and will crow all day. However, a rooster's crow is NOT any louder than a barking dog. You will see studies that the crow will be 130 decibels. Yes, if you are right in their face and in front of their beak with a microphone recording it. They aren't that loud. That's the volume of a jet engine. All a rooster is doing is his job. Making sounds and alerting the flock to danger is the number 1 concern of a rooster (followed by that sweet love). Please don't use a crowing collar. They are cruel and dangerous to chickens.

Fun Fact. Hens crow. If you don't have a rooster, a dominant hen will take the place of a rooster with crowing and sometimes mounting the other hens. (Source: my own crazy Nightsister Hens!)

You NEED a rooster for eggs

Independent hens don't need no roo. Women don't need a man to menstruate. Hens don't need roosters to produce eggs. 

Chickens are stinky and attract rats

Waste management is a human issue, not a chicken issue. One of the plans you need to have in place is what to do with all that poop! Chicken manure is fertilizer gold. You want a beautiful lawn and garden? Utilize those chooks! If you keep a clean coop and run, the smell won't be an issue.

Litter is a personal preference and philosophy in the chicken community. All coops and situations are different and everyone has the right to choose what they like to use without judgement.

I personally use sand as litter in my run and coop. I scoop the poop out of my coop once a day. I don't have to, but it's my preference to do so. If I miss a day, it's not a huge deal. I rake the run once a week. I use PDZ (zeolite) to help with any odor and ammonia from the manure. (Some people use lime, I feel it's too hard on the lungs, but if you use it, that's your personal choice.)

Some people use the deep litter method (it's a composting method using shavings and chicken poop). It's work in the respect of you have to turn the litter to get air into the bedding. But it doesn't require an every day clean out. Yes, there will be some more odor, but it will keep your coop warm in the winter. 

Stink doesn't attract rats and mice. FOOD attracts rodents. If you don't have feed all over your run and coop (don't keep food in your coop for this reason), rodents aren't an issue. I've had chickens for two years. I have Grandpa's Feeders. They are treadle feeders that are rat proof. I had my first rat this winter. I think it was more because we've had more predatory birds this year and it felt safer with my dinosaurs than the hawk. I used a live trap and got him after a week. I haven't seen any evidence of rodents since.

Chickens can live anywhere

They really can live just about anywhere. However, there are things to consider.

Coops: Chickens need predator proof, draft free, dry, ventilated coops with roosts and a nest box. Bigger is better. Buying a prefab coop from a feed store probably won't meet your needs and it will fall apart. You should have around 2-4 square feet per bird. This allows for chicken math errors. You want a window on each side of your coop, with chicken wire protecting the openings. Heat kills chickens. Chickens can deal with winter way better than summer since they are 105-107F. 

Prefab coops aren't always predator proof either. You want hardware cloth, not chicken wire. Hawk netting is helpful to keep away aerial predators. A fox or raccoon can get into smaller coops easily. Be aware of your predators.

Runs: A run is an enclosed area that keeps chickens safe from predation and weather. It should be covered with 10 square feet per bird. Bury hardware cloth at least a foot out from your coop and a foot under ground. This will discourage predators who dig. Hardware cloth makes it difficult for snakes, mice, mink/weasels, and raccoons to get in. A raccoon can bend chicken wire. Remember chicken wire is designed to keep chickens in, not to keep things out. Keep out any wild birds. They carry diseases and we are on the precipice of dealing with a Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza Virus. 

These are a few common chicken myths. Do you have any myths you want busted or confirmed? Feel free to ask.


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H5N1: Avian Flu

Well folks it's here. I know people are suffering from Covid Fatigue and since January we have been shouting from the rooftops about avi...