Say it is merricks? Whats my best option? Culling my entire flock and cleaning all bedding and dust out ans scrub coop with bleach before i get now chickens? Plus get rid of all feed and feeders?
Even if you do as you describe, If you have Marek's, it will not rid your yard of the disease. It is highly viable in the environment, and can live for months or possibly years. It's in the very soil where you live now. The efforts to remove it from your yard, house, and chicken areas would have to be extreme and even then might not fully work.
There are options open to you but they require care. The first logical step is to be sure that you have the virus. There is a link in my signature that shows what I went through with Marek's and how we confirmed that it was in fact Marek's.
If you confirm that you have Marek's:
- It would not hurt to clean the coop and chicken areas well. You cannot reasonably get rid of the virus, but you can reduce its numbers. Your chickens will always shed it, but keeping things clean reduces the amount in their environment. Cleanliness has nothing to do with a bird getting Marek's or not, but anything you can do to reduce stress and disease vectors can only help. It may also reduce the possibility of it being carried on the wind from your location. I use a virucide like OdoBan to clean the coop.
- You can keep all of your current birds, as it must be assumed that they have all been exposed by now. Culling them won't do much to help. Marek's is shed through the dander of the birds and is very, very viable. They will either build immunity and live (but shed the virus forever), or will develop symptoms and then get 'better' and live (some birds live for years after showing symptoms, some weeks or months), or they will pass away.
- You can breed your birds that survive, and hope for them to pass immunity to the chicks. You will probably still lose some chicks. This has worked for others with Marek's in their flock.
- If you buy or get new birds, ou can only ever buy day-old vaccinated chicks, OR chickens that were vaccinated at one day old for Marek's, and hope for the best. It really depends on what strain of Marek's you might have, and what strains they are vaccinated against. The vaccine isn't a cure or a preventative but just a boost to help them build immunity. Vaccinated chicks must not be exposed to the virus for at least 1-3 weeks after hatching.
- If you confirm Marek's, it's important that you never sell or give away your chickens, as it can spread the virus to others. Please be aware that it can also travel on your clothing, shoes, hair, etc... so if you have friends or family with chickens steps might be considered to reduce their exposure (such as changing shoes and clothes, etc).
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