Thank YouDay old chicks from a hatchery are usually fine. There is no need to bother with quarantine (housing them far away, changing clothes, etc.)

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Thank YouDay old chicks from a hatchery are usually fine. There is no need to bother with quarantine (housing them far away, changing clothes, etc.)
That may be true for commercial layer chicks, the ones that produce eggs for grocery stores. I don't know for sure.My bad. I was reading a portion of an article on the google page that said 100% of all chicks were vaccinated against mareks. What I didn’t notice was that if you clicked to read it you had to register. I have no idea now why or who said that. View attachment 3270919
Pretty sure they are talking about the commercial egg laying hatcheries, where they may hatch 1,000,000 chicks each week in different hatcheries for the commercial industry, not the hatcheries we get our chicks from. That kind of thing happens a lot on here, people read stuff that applies to the commercial industry and think it applies to us. We can learn a lot by reading about what they do but we don't manage them that way, that's not the world we live in. It does create a lot of confusion on here.My bad. I was reading a portion of an article on the google page that said 100% of all chicks were vaccinated against mareks. What I didn’t notice was that if you clicked to read it you had to register. I have no idea now why or who said that.
Thank YouUsing hatching eggs provide one additional layer of protection. If hatcheries never transmitted a disease then diseases would seldom be transmitted.