INDIANA BYC'ers HERE!

Does anyone know anything about the Feathered Friends Club in Columbus? Just thinking about making a short drive, if it has a good reputation for health/cleanliness.

Here's an article about the development of avian influenza vaccine. It was posted just yesterday. Part of the reason it wasn't an issue until now is that poultry that have been vaccinated can't be exported because if they are tested, a healthy vaccinated bird will test positive just like a sick bird about to die. (We need a different kind of test, and that should also be quite doable--they're obviously doing antibody testing, which is cheap and easy, when they perhaps should be doing antigen (virus) testing, which is more expensive and sometimes more time-consuming). Anyway, below is the article.

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USDA developing H5 vaccine

By Greg Cima
Posted April 29, 2015
Federal agriculture researchers are developing a poultry-use vaccine against the highly pathogenic H5 influenza strains that have infected poultry and wildlife since December 2014.
Dr. David Suarez, research leader for the exotic and emerging avian viral disease unit at the Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Service, said the ARS was performing safety studies on a vaccine that should be well-matched against all the highly pathogenic H5 influenza viruses discovered in the U.S. since December 2014, unlike available commercial vaccines that would not provide as much antigenic similarity. The vaccine still needed to be reviewed and approved under regulatory processes before it could be handled by outside companies, which would produce the vaccine if needed.
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The H5 influenza viruses have been found in states ranging from Washington to Arkansas, spreading from detection only in the Pacific flyway through February to the Central and Mississippi flyways further east in March and April. That spread has been accompanied by discovery of the virus in increasing numbers of commercial poultry flocks, at least 13 reported so far.
USDA information indicates H5N2, H5N8, and H5N1 influenzas have been found, with one or more discovered as of April 22 in Arkansas, California, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
The H5N1 virus is a new combination of avian influenza genes and is not the same as the strains that have caused deaths in other countries, although it could cause disease in humans, according to information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Dr. Suarez said U.S. poultry producers tend not to vaccinate flocks in the absence of a disease because the act of vaccination could imply to trading partners that the virus is present. Instead, such vaccines tend to be used to protect smaller portions of the poultry industry where the virus is or has been present, helping companies return to normal production.
CDC information indicates that no people were known to have become ill from exposure to the highly pathogenic H5 influenza virus strains. Similar viruses have caused human illnesses and deaths in other countries, but the public health risk from these influenza outbreaks is considered to be low.
“Most human infections with avian influenza viruses have occurred after close and prolonged contact with infected birds or the excretions/secretions of infected birds,” CDC information states.
Five poultry industry organizations published in March a joint statement intended to assure the public that private companies and government agencies were working to control the spread of the influenza viruses or eliminate them. The statement from the U.S. Poultry & Egg Association, National Chicken Council, National Turkey Federation, United Egg Producers, and USA Poultry and Egg Export Council indicates state and federal agencies have worked with the poultry industry to quarantine affected flocks, and birds from those flocks have been kept out of the food chain.
 
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Okay, now someone MUST design that shirt! I want a "chicken lickin" Indiana BYCers hoodie!
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I have some ideas brewing on this tshirt....
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There is a contest going on for the 2016 chicken items like hoodies. All of you should come up with something. So far no one has even submitted a design. The winning design is to be announced at Chickenfest so please at least one of you submit a design. I really like the idea of a Chicken lickin hoodie. Still I'm going to be a bit busy and not able to design it this month or next.




To our Indianapolis BYC'ers - do you know a local veterinarian who treats chickens? I'm hoping I never need one, but would like to know who to call if the need arises.
There is a vet in Bargersville that sees birds.
 

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