I'm stumped and lost and I am seriously thinking about culling my whole flock. Please help.

I KNOW WHAT IT IS!!!! Those chicks you got from tractor supply, they died so, maybe they had something wrong with them and it passed to Blizzards chicks but it didn't kill them. but when you put them outside, what they caught passed to the first chicken, then the second chicken,and so on....
They actually weren't from tsc. They were from a local feed store who orders from ideal. But they were rarer breeds that ideal poultry doesn't actually offer to the public, which makes me wonder if whoever ideal for them from has been sending out sick chicks. But the feed store people didn't say others had issues as well when I asked, so I'm trying to believe they're honest and take their word for it.

I know some of these illnesses can be picked up from literally anywhere... I get strays in my yard all the time, wild birds sometimes, and I've only lived in my place for 9 months so I'm wondering if whoever lived on this property left behind illnesses. Or the sand; we've had a ton of spring rain, it's really possible the rain washed illnesses onto the property or brought it to the surface because the sand shifts every time it rains.

There's just so many possibilities as to how these things could have been picked up, it seems kinda useless to speculate on the how and why and more useful to focus on the treatments or the next steps.

But I do thank you for your thoughts! I wondered the same thing.
 
well i think you should
1 move the living area
2 keep trying
The whole property is sand. So I think moving the living area wouldn't necessarily stop whatever is going on. The rain and wind literally constantly shifts the sand. I rent as well so I've been hard pressed to plant grass seed and invest money into a property that's not permanent for me to keep the sand from shifting as much.

But I am trying. I'm giving the flock everything I've got rn.
 
In February I had a flock of around 100 chickens. Mixed flock of bantams and standards, all different ages, except youngsters were kept in a large grow out pen. My white silkie bantam was due to hatch and only 3 eggs developed. I had her separated and in the house so she wouldn't get picked on, a little setup in the brooder. I purchased 5 chicks from a feed store to slip under her to raise along with the 3 that hatched. She took all 5 chicks, like the good mama she is. All 5 of those died, no explanation. I contacted the feed store, wondering if anyone else had any issues, as I've raised a good number of birds and never had fatalities like that. The other 3 that hatched were perfectly fine and still are. The feed store response was that they would ask around and if other customers had had issues they'd let me know. I assume no one else had issues, because I didn't hear from them again.
I slipped several tsc chicks under Blizzard after the 5 passed and I made sure the other 3 were doing well. After a week or so I moved them to their own freshly cleaned and sanitized grow out pen, near my runs so Blizzard and her young wouldn't be stressed out by trying to put her back with the flock right away, and as the babies grew they could all see each other and the flock could get acquainted with the young. Around that time we had a ton of rain and a pullet became ill, then 2-3 days later died. A week or so later another one. Honestly I've lost so many at this point I can't even remember the order. After the 2nd passed I treated the flock with corrid, thinking coccidia for sure. After the 3rd passed I called the vet closest to me and requested a fecal be done; they don't see or treat poultry but they said they'd do a fecal- it came back clean. After I lost 2 more I contacted the state vet about a necropsy. At that time the flock had gotten stick tight fleas and I was treating with a spray and poultry dust while I was waiting for elector PSP to arrive.
Vet recommended treating the stick tight fleas, thinking that was likely the culprit and if I treated the bugs and they still kept dying I'd know for sure it wasn't the issue. {since I already treated for coccidia).
Symptoms have been- lethargy, puffed up feathers, some will eat and drink still a little and some won't. Decreased egg production in my layers. There wasn't any bloody stools, but the other symptoms made me think coccidia. The state vet had said symptoms could be the fleas, but because they started dying before the fleas I felt like that wasn't quite right. They deteriorate pretty quickly. Seemingly no matter what I do; vitamins and electrolytes, nutridrench, liquid vitamin b, liquid poultry cell, scrambled eggs. They get more and more lethargic and don't want to even walk, then bam, dead. Some of them seem to perk up a little before dying though. It sucks, because every single time I can't help but let my hopes rise.
After I treated with elector PSP by dipping them, then stripped and cleaned the coop and run and sprayed with permethrin and sprinkled poultry dust in the nesting boxes within 2-3 days the stick tight fleas were gone.
After another 2 didn't make it I finally found a local vet to see one of my roosters who was sick.
She treated with a steroid, an antibiotic and b12. She was assuming respiratory because there was a bit of nasal discharge. But she wasn't sure it was viral or bacterial. She thought the best route was treating anyway and going from there. If he didn't make it necropsy would be the next step. He recovered. I asked for antibiotics to treat the flock but she said she/we can't treat that way. Gotta be an as needed treatment. It cost just over $100, and I just can't afford to spend $100 for every bird when we don't even know what the illness actually is, or if he even recovered from the meds or if he would have recovered on his own.
So I picked up la 200 and started injecting ones as they got sick. It seems to buy them a couple extra days, but always ends up in death. I also tried dosing it in the sick chickens water. Same results. So I kinda gave up using it.
Continued vitamins and electrolytes in water, nutridrench in sick chickens food for the ones who are eating, syringe for when they're not.
Also, I sanitize with oxine. Regularly. I clean the coop and runs at least twice a week.
Also, my property is all sand. Like I live at the beach with no water. I hate it, as I've learned bugs thrive in it. Fleas, mites, lice, you name it. The coop and runs are large and I free range regularly. I did stop for awhile when they started getting sick thinking they were getting into something that was killing them, but that didn't seem to stop the illness so I recently started free ranging again.
Some started to get very thin very quickly before dying, and I started seeing yellowish foamy stool. So a few more birds didn't make it and I drove 4 hours to have 3 birds on ice necropsied. A 6 month old EE pullet, a 10 month old bantam pullet and a 10 day old chick. 3 deaths within 24 hours. And the EE seemed perfectly healthy the day before! She showed NO symptoms. She died from asphyxiation- a corn kernel from the scratch lodged in her throat. However, she had signs inside consistent with mareks and the state vet said she would have passed in the next couple months from it. No worms found though.
The bantam had round worms and thread worms overload. No mareks signs though, although she was probably carrying the virus. The chick "just didn't thrive, and sometimes that happens with chicks."
3 deaths in 24 hours, none with the same symptoms. Sigh.
So I treated with ivermectin, topical. During which I found lice on some of the chickens. And they've started having really dirty bottoms.
After a few days and watching the chickens closely they were still having yellow foamy stools and still itching like crazy. The ivermectin didn't do anything to treat the lice {which, it's supposed to} aaannnnd I'm assuming probably nothing to treat the worms even though it's supposed to. So, I again dipped in elector PSP and cleaned out and treated the coop and runs and nesting boxes.
Then I used safe guard to deworm, although I just did a pea sized amount in the mouth and I've learned that that probably wasn't enough for dosing, and a lot have diarrhea.
And they're still itching like crazy, and even though I've been checking and checking for lice I don't think they're gone.
And now there's DEFINITELY respiratory issues, as most are sneezing and have clogged noses and NOW eye issues- that's the most recent symptom/ problem. So I've been using vetRX and ointment on their eyes that doesn't seem to be helping much.
It's so much. All these ailments one after another and I still don't actually know what started all of this or what exactly is causing them to drop like flies despite my best efforts/ meds.
My oldest girls, a year and a half old, 8 sex links, have all thus far survived it all.
I have lost a couple 1 year olds though.
I feed purina layena, flock raiser and chick starter depending on the group I'm feeding. No way it got moldy, they go through it too fast to get moldy. I have 2 brooders, 3 other pens for ones I wanted to breed when we get past all this- some of which were separated pretty recently and seem to be hanging in better since separating from the main flock, a young chicken "Hospital ward" for the "teens", and an adult sick chicken pen for when I start seeing symptoms to separate. Although today I gave up on separation as the majority of the main flock are sneezing and wheezing and have crusty noses and eyes at this point, and a lot now have dirty bottoms from diarrhea. Main flock has a 5 gallon waterer and a 7 gallon- cleaned almost daily with oxine. 2 big feeders, emptied and cleaned with oxine and air dried every time it gets dirty in any way. I don't feed them on the ground, I have tons of extra dishes for when they have watermelon or cantaloupe or treats and stick with fruit on the hottest days as a treat. Scratch every now and again. They get veggie scraps and only every now and again leftovers.

Do I cull the whole flock and just start over? My heart breaks even more just thinking about it.
Do I hit them today with another dip and round of proper dosing of safe guard and try the la 200 again and just hit them with everything? Do I start with the corrid again today and the dip and the safe guard, then wait until that's all done then hit them with the la 200?
Switch to a different antibiotic?
Do I treat one thing at a time? Spend all this money just to lose them to the mareks anyway? Find a different vet who might just give me enough meds to treat the whole flock for everything?
I feel so defeated. I'm so broken from losing all my babies. I'm down to maybe half the flock if I'm lucky.
It sounds like infectious corzya a deadly highly contagious respiratory infection can be treated with doxycycline or similar from a vet. Can be brought in by new birds or wild birds. I’d say those chicks you brought in came infected. Heavy rain/flooding for extended periods cause myriad of poultry illness.
Chicks possibly have coccidiosis wet ground and poo stew are good breeding ground for cocci easily identified as blood in faeces., treat with baycox urgently or will die quickly and keep pen clean and don’t overcrowd.
 

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