Trish posted today that she is leaving County Line Hatchery and going to concentrate on her show birds. She will be selling off some good stock it sounds like.
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And does this do the inside too? As a wormer?
You have to send in the results to the Iowa Poultry Assn., as I told you long ago. But yes, it is that simple.
If you call the Iowa Poultry Assn., and talk with the NPIP coordinator, they can simply explain it. Again, it is that simple.
ETA: It costs 10 or 15.00 per year to be certified.
Yes. The tester tests your birds. You fill out the forms. Send in a copy of your testing papers. Enclose $15. Wait 2 months. It runs from July to end of June. They have been giving us a grace period into Aug so they have time to get all paperwork done.Can someone explain what is involved in NPI certification for your flock? I was just told that someone just had to plumera test (sp) my flock, send in the paperwork and then I get my number, is that correct? I know a tester who could do it. Is that really all there is to it?
I am planning on taking the certification training in May. Only offered 1 time a year.The real cost is the antigen to do the testing.
Yes. The tester tests your birds. You fill out the forms. Send in a copy of your testing papers. Enclose $15. Wait 2 months. It runs from July to end of June. They have been giving us a grace period into Aug so they have time to get all paperwork done.
Being NPIP also means we follow the rules. We can lose our NPIP certification if we bring home birds that are not from an NPIP flock or tested. When getting birds at swaps where the birds were tested it is wise to get copy of the test for your records or which NPIP flock they came from. Better safe than sorry.