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Happy Friday
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Thanks!I love your chickens photo shots![]()
Welcome back to the land of air conditioning.A fan was the only thing that made it bearable to sleep the last few nights while I was in the UK.
Wait! Did someone say mystery?
Others can probably add to this, but this is what I know regarding purchasing baby chicks in the US:
Since large hatcheries incubate eggs separately from the flock and in controlled environments (i.e. different people work the incubators, so they are physically removed from the flock/isolated, and use biosecurity measures), there isn't the cross contamination with chicks hatched in flock/with a broody or with a backyard flock where they aren't kept separate with biosecurity measures. So, chicks shouldn't transmit/carry flock diseases (unless they are genetic OR transmissible through the egg/shell).
The other reason it is really common to buy/ship day old chicks in the US is convenience. Since chicks absorb the remaining yolk just before hatching, they can live a few days with no need for food or water - so we exploit nature (I assume that this happens so that chicks can survive until all are hatched and Momma can take the whole clutch off the nest to search for food and water.). This allows them to be shipped all across the country with minimal issues - sometimes a heating pack is added - especially in colder months, and they add a gel liquid (with electrolytes) for them to peck at, but otherwise, they generally travel fairly well as long as there are no delays in shipping.
Shipping older fowl (pullets, adults) required express shipping and more thoughtful travel arrangements - plus are more likely to also carry diseases with them that chicks would not yet be exposed to so aren't carriers (yet).
Besides, it means that as soon as chicks hatch, they are processed and shipped, so for many large hatcheries, they don't need much for brooders (only if they keep pullets for replacement or for later sale at a significant price bump). Otherwise, the 'extras' (mostly males) get, unfortunately, disposed of.![]()
Thank you both for the detailed explanations. It makes sense considering it like this, but...Yes, this.
@ManueB I was waiting to get inside to my computer to respond, but @bgmathteach beat me to it and covered everything.
The only thing I have to add is that many of the diseases people worry about transmitting to their flocks are not transmitted by the egg. Things like Marek's for example. So as long as the incubating and hatching facility is sterile and separate from any actual chickens, you can be pretty confident those little chicks are disease free.
Of course things like poor genetics or even genetic disorders that come from a narrow gene pool or breeding for traits like over-production of eggs, are not diseases and therefore the chicks can have all of those.
When introducing an adult, you really cannot screen out diseases like Marek's, but you can make sure that things like respiratory illnesses including mycoplasma are not introduced to an existing flock.
I did a five weeks quarantine when I bought the four POL pullets but honestly it would not have been effective if there had been a viral disease. I don't see how it's possible to do a proper quarantine free-ranging, and I don't have it in me to lock up chickens in my barn or second chicken shed for five weeks. Even if I had, dander could still have flown through.I have not quarantined my chicks for more than a week or two, by the time they are two weeks old my chicks are usually integrated into my flock, at partially….
Mr P I did quarantine, he came from a flock I was not sure of and I was very paranoid.
I tried to quarantine the 3 Azurs I bought last year, but Fluffy broke that quarantine when she ran between my legs into their pen! I figured I was likely safe for any disease but still you never know.
As for getting day olds, it’s a money thing. Day olds are less expensive than POL pullets. One can get 50 day olds for what you can get 10 or 20 POL pullets for depending on breed. And for the more exotic breeds up here like Lavender Orps you might pay up to $50/pullet, if you can find them. At $11/chick the day olds are less expensive.
That's awesome!babies!!!
We woke up this morning to 7 lil puffballs. Morinth has 4 and Samara has 3.
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Samara and her 3 wee floofs.
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The proud mamas
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I'm leaving the last egg until the evening in case it's just lazy. No pip and it had gotten tucked into a blue eggshell somehow so...we will see. I'm so happy with 7 though! And proud of the hens!
Squeeeeeeebabies!!!
We woke up this morning to 7 lil puffballs. Morinth has 4 and Samara has 3.
View attachment 3908312
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Samara and her 3 wee floofs.
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The proud mamas
View attachment 3908319
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View attachment 3908318
I'm leaving the last egg until the evening in case it's just lazy. No pip and it had gotten tucked into a blue eggshell somehow so...we will see. I'm so happy with 7 though! And proud of the hens!