- Mar 19, 2007
- 283
- 14
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We have been in the process of remodeling our old 1940 plantations style home and have been scraping and chipping old pain off the exterior. We have been very careful to not work around our kids and clean up after ourselves as best as we can. We have tested the old paint and found it to have lead in it. In our past remodels after we were done and all cleaned up we would retest various surfaces and found them to be lead free after cleanup.
The other day we were working on the particular side of the house where our chicken normally hang out when they are freeranging. We were outside chipping away with the chicken wandering around. I never saw them get close to the house and scavange close to the house, but that doesn't mean they didn't. On the third day of working on that side of the house I went to let the girls out and I noticed one of our 4 month of pullets was dead under the roost. I couldn't find anything wrong with her. The next day we found another 3month old pullet dead under the roost, same thing no obvious injuries. Today I went out to let them loose again and again I found another 3 month old dead under the roost.
It dawned on me that all this started after we were working on that side of the house scraping paint. Could this be acute lead poisoning? I've looking throught the roost dropping on the side that the young pullets hang and didn't find paint chips in their poo. I've got them locked up for now, but I'm a little worried. What about the older hens and their eggs that we eat?
I got the DW going down to the store and get another lead testing kit and I'm going to try and test their poo and some of the eggs to see if they have lead in it, but I'm not sure if there will be high enough concentration in it to register.
Being both the DW and I are medical professionals and know the dangers of lead paint so we have always been extremely careful when doing projects and have been doing so sucessfully as the whole family has been tested for lead a couple times and all came up negative.
Can acute lead poisoning kill young pullets in a couple days? if so, other than not letting the freerange for now, anything else I can do? What about future eggs production and eating?
Aloha,
Cory
The other day we were working on the particular side of the house where our chicken normally hang out when they are freeranging. We were outside chipping away with the chicken wandering around. I never saw them get close to the house and scavange close to the house, but that doesn't mean they didn't. On the third day of working on that side of the house I went to let the girls out and I noticed one of our 4 month of pullets was dead under the roost. I couldn't find anything wrong with her. The next day we found another 3month old pullet dead under the roost, same thing no obvious injuries. Today I went out to let them loose again and again I found another 3 month old dead under the roost.
It dawned on me that all this started after we were working on that side of the house scraping paint. Could this be acute lead poisoning? I've looking throught the roost dropping on the side that the young pullets hang and didn't find paint chips in their poo. I've got them locked up for now, but I'm a little worried. What about the older hens and their eggs that we eat?
I got the DW going down to the store and get another lead testing kit and I'm going to try and test their poo and some of the eggs to see if they have lead in it, but I'm not sure if there will be high enough concentration in it to register.
Being both the DW and I are medical professionals and know the dangers of lead paint so we have always been extremely careful when doing projects and have been doing so sucessfully as the whole family has been tested for lead a couple times and all came up negative.
Can acute lead poisoning kill young pullets in a couple days? if so, other than not letting the freerange for now, anything else I can do? What about future eggs production and eating?
Aloha,
Cory