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Please dont take offense, but some people see chickens as livestock, while others see them as adored pets with benefits. I totally get it. I have goats and chickens. To me the goats are livestock. They keep the brush down and provide meat. I feel no personal connection/affection towards goats.I understand your point of view.
I have been fortunate to never have had Marek's or any other virulent disease during well over 30 years of chicken keeping even though I have had problems that needed to be dealt with.
I just know that dealing with a disease free flock is super easy and starting afresh with disease free birds is the way to go unless someone has irreplaceable poultry genetics and those are quire rare.
Oh, I'm so sorry about your Little Lady...@khind , i gratefully dont have mareks in my flock, & only know the basics. I did have a chick that was born with congenital cataracts. She did fine with her broody mom and fellow siblings. (I never even noticed her problem until they were several weeks old, when mama hen quit tending to the clutch.) She grew to be a beautiful little hen & laid pretty blue eggs. Her vision was poor, but she could see a little bit during the day. Unfortunately she was very meek in temperment. (I named her Little Lady.) Other flock members noticed her meekness, & she was often shunned and bullied.
I would be concerned about a similiar thing happening with your hen, especially since you say she is lowest on the pecking order. I found Little Lady dead in the yard one very hot late summer afternoon when she was 3 years old. Ive always thought it possible the others didnt let her come near the water to drink.
Though it is true your flock has already been exposed to Mareks disease, your hen's blindness May be a difficult issue to overcome. But i have read other threads where blind chickens thrived, so you will just have to try and see. If you observe bullying, do provide extra stations of available food and water, same as when integrating younger pullets in with an older flock. If i had thought to do so, i might still have my Little Lady.
Did you notice your blind birds closing their eyes and dozing off more than the others and more than before they lost substantial vision?I had my first case of Marek's about 2 years ago. I have a closed flock, never brought new birds in except day old chicks, so no idea how it got here, but it did. I've not yet had one that displayed progressive paralysis. Mine have been mostly occular, total of about 5 so far. A couple of hens had many tumors on necropsy with no occular symptoms, so the visceral form also there. I seem to have a relatively mild strain, all things considered. The eyes get worse very slowly usually. To cull or keep is entirely a personal decision. If vision becomes so impaired they cannot be normal, I cull. Otherwise I leave them. They've all been exposed, and most of mine have shown no symptoms at all. If things get worse, I may change my mind and cull earlier, but for now, since they've all already been exposed, I'm not going to just cull them all.