- Thread starter
- #46,421
Hooray!!!Great news!!! Jaffar crowed for me today, very weak crowing, but, this means that he is recovering from his respiratory illness (antibiotics and praying worked)!!!!!
![]()
!!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Hooray!!!Great news!!! Jaffar crowed for me today, very weak crowing, but, this means that he is recovering from his respiratory illness (antibiotics and praying worked)!!!!!
![]()
!!
I just can't let it go. It drives me nuts. These silly warnings from the CDC are used by people to stop efforts to get backyard chickens permitted in their communities. They use these releases to paint chickens as dirty disease ridden animals.I had a feeling that the percentage due to kissing chickens would be vanishingly small.
Good job Bob. After all, it was Fox news....![]()
The colours aren’t quite so vivid anymore but I still love it.That sounds beautiful![]()
It's very cool
Heard that was happening, stay safe.We in Vic are going into a new 7 day lockdown
Took Violet to the school book fair after school and she chose this
View attachment 2690672
Even more beautiful than I imagined!
Yes it does, thank you!I assume you are asking about the following statements:
Always wash your hands after handling poultry, she advised.
I absolutely agree with this practice. This is the number one way to stop from getting a salmonella infection.
Keep a separate pair of boots and clothes to use in the coop, so you don't carry germs back into the home.
I keep a separate pair of shoes which I use in the backyard. Unless you are moving between quarantined groups of chickens, this feels excessive. This is where you need to decide how you want to balance the risk vs inconvenience. I tend not to lay down in the run and it is a rare occurrence when a hen jumps up on me.In general, the easiest place to pick up salmonella is from their feces. If you are not getting their feces on your clothes then the risk of transmission is pretty small. Salmonella does not survive well when it is dry and exposed to sunlight. It likes a damp dark environment. Once their feces is dried out the risk of transmission is very low. Because most coops do not have skylights built into them, it is important that they stay dry and you do not allow for feces to build up. Feces that has piled up stays moist in the middle and the salmonella can effectively survive there.Don't let poultry live in the house
OR if you are going to, keep it cleaned up. Understand though that you are increasing the risk of transmission.Never eat or drink in the area they live
I do this all the time. If they poop in your cup, don't drink it. This is again you deciding what level of risk you find acceptable. If I touch them or they touch me, I am going to wash my hand before I pick up food and eat it with that hand. I will however pick up my coffee cup and drink from it with a "dirty" hand as my hand does not touch the lip of the cup or the liquid. When I go back in I wash my hands and cup. I do not let the chickens drink from my cup. It's just bad form on their part and they need to have manners. It would be very unusual for salmonella to be transmitted via the air. It requires touch.Avoid kissing or snuggling them
I wish mine would snuggle with me. I would certainly let them if they wanted to do so. Afterwards I would certainly wash up and did so back when Maleficent and Daisy, the greatest hen ever, would snuggle with me. I don't think I could kiss them. Kissing is going to be a great way to put the salmonella right on your lips. If I did kiss them it would not be on the beak. We have all seen them poke through poop with their beaks. Backyard eggs are more likely to have salmonella than store bought eggs.
This is likely true because store bought eggs must be washed prior to sale. You should also wash your eggs prior to to use. I take them out of the fridge or out of the table basket, wash them quick with a little dawn dishwashing soap and then cook with them."They hug them, kiss them, put clothes on them, bring them inside the house," he added - all behaviors that increase the risk of infection.
This is all correct. These are all ways in which salmonella can be transferred to humans.
To me I approach this with a determination of the level of risk I am willing to assume. In general Salmonella causes diarrhea. It is rarely fatal, it is uncommon for it to be severe, and it is rarely treated with antibiotics rather you treat the symptoms to avoid dehydration. I don't want it but I am not going to go all hazmat suit to avoid it. Why have chickens if you are going to do that?
Things to consider
This is how I manage the risk of salmonella. You must chose what level of risk with which you are comfortable and act accordingly.
- Do you have underlying health conditions that could make an infection more dangerous? I do not but if I did, that would change my thoughts on how I approach my ladies.
- Are you very young or elderly? Immune systems do not respond quite as well in the very young and the elderly so the risk of severe infection is a little higher.
Does this answer your question @LozzyR ?
I think By Bob covered it further on.Her comb is still so titchy, I think it’ll be spring for her but I love the fact she’s hanging out with Snow each time so far. Will prob change once she is laying herself.
Also, not a peep of escort call from Snow either daystill adjusting to what her body is doing?
@Shadrach any ideas on the silent laying?![]()
Thank you. Read.NY Times pdf
For those that can't get the link to work you will find a pdf of the article attached for your reading pleasure.