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The Cream Legbar chicks in the group were from 3 mothers, but I didn't keep them sorted out (they tumbled out of their different baskets int he incubator after hatching). In addition, they were raised together in the brooder (brooder raised, not by a chicken mother), along with some Naked Neck aloha chicks, and so were exposed early. It wasn't until the chicks were 2 weeks old that Paula (one of the CL mothers) suddenly died. I did a necropsy, thought it was Mareks, but wasn't sure (should have just gotten an official necropsy then). I decided I didn't have it in me to cull 26 2-week old chicks, so I let them grow out (in their own pen) and started to have hope. Culled all the boys (wasn't planning to keep any), and then, right around POL, one of the pullets dropped dead. Knew to get an official necropsy this time, and drove her to the Texas A&M poultry location in Gonzales, TX. Had a long talk with the pathologist there (I'm a human pathologist, so we spoke the same language). He called me the next day, and her findings were classic for ALV, NOT Marek's. He sent photos, and it was exactly what I had found in her mother.
I read a LOT of articles, before just admitting that I needed to cull them all before any substantial contact with the rest of my chickens. It was the right thing to do, but it was still a sad experience.
I finally ate two of them about 2 weeks ago - I pulled them from the freezer and put them into a pressure cooker with seasonings and water and made the most amazing soup I have ever had. I'm glad for that - seems right somehow. They had a very good life, and a humane death. It was just a very discouraging experience. All part of keeping chickens, though.
After all, if I want to "cull hard" for a trait or feature, I don't have the room or housing for that to mean anything other than freezer camp.
- Ant Farm