Introducing two new started pullets from two different flocks?

Jahvarga

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I bought 4, one day old Easter egger pullets back in April. My luck has not been so good. One died the day after I got them home, one turned out to be a sussex, one turned out to be a Rhode Island Red, and the only Easter egger in the bunch turned out to be a rooster! I found the rooster a home, and now I am down to the two large breed, 4.5 month old hens.

I want to add two more started pullets to the 'flock'. I want to get one cream legbar and one golden buff. However, the legbar would be coming from a local breeder and the golden buff from the feed store down the street. The legbar is 5 months old and the golden buff is about 20 weeks old. Is this possible? If so, how would I go about introducing them and "quarantining" them?
 
I bought 4, one day old Easter egger pullets back in April. My luck has not been so good. One died the day after I got them home, one turned out to be a sussex, one turned out to be a Rhode Island Red, and the only Easter egger in the bunch turned out to be a rooster! I found the rooster a home, and now I am down to the two large breed, 4.5 month old hens.

I want to add two more started pullets to the 'flock'. I want to get one cream legbar and one golden buff. However, the legbar would be coming from a local breeder and the golden buff from the feed store down the street. The legbar is 5 months old and the golden buff is about 20 weeks old. Is this possible? If so, how would I go about introducing them and "quarantining" them?
In case you didn't notice, 5 months and 20 are the same age. I would probably introduce the 2 new ones together and then integrate them into the 2 you have now. Not sure if you would have to quarantine them separately?
 
How, and if, you quarantine depends on your tolerance for risk and possible loss. True quarantine is pretty tough to do in a backyard situation as it requires housing separated by quite a distance(100-300').
It would be best to quarantine birds from different sources separately.

Integration, after the typical 4 week quarantine, works best with lots of extra separate but adjacent space.

Here's some notes I've taken on integration that I found to be very helpful.......
......take what applies or might help and ignore the rest.
See if any of them, or the links provided at the bottom, might offer some tips that will assist you in your situation:

Integration of new chickens into flock.
Consider biological/medical quarantine:
BYC Medical Quarantine Article
BYC 'quarantine' search

Integration Basics:
It's all about territory and resources(space/food/water).
Existing birds will almost always attack new ones to defend their resources.
Understanding chicken behaviors is essential to integrating new birds into your flock.

Confine new birds within sight but physically segregated from older/existing birds for several weeks, so they can see and get used to each other but not physically interact.

In adjacent runs, spread scratch grains along the dividing mesh, best if mesh is just big enough for birds to stick their head thru, so they get used to eating together.

The more space, the better. Birds will peck to establish dominance, the pecked bird needs space to get away. As long as there's no copious blood drawn and/or new bird is not trapped/pinned down and beaten unmercilessly, let them work it out. Every time you interfere or remove new birds, they'll have to start the pecking order thing all over again.

Multiple feed/water stations. Dominance issues are most often carried out over sustenance, more stations lessens the frequency of that issue.

Places for the new birds to hide 'out of line of sight'(but not a dead end trap) and/or up and away from any bully birds. Roosts, pallets or boards leaned up against walls or up on concrete blocks, old chairs tables, branches, logs, stumps out in the run can really help. Lots of diversion and places to 'hide' instead of bare wide open run.

This used to be a better search, new format has reduced it's efficacy, but still:
Read up on integration..... BYC advanced search>titles only>integration
This is good place to start reading, BUT some info is outdated IMO:
http://www.backyardchickens.com/a/adding-to-your-flock
 
Thanks. For some reason my brain wasn't working last night. I feel silly about the 5 month/20 week thing.

I don't think quarantining them separately is possible. I can't imagine keeping a hen by herself. How concerned should I be? Do most people quarantine their started pullets?

If it is really important, I could just skip on the cream legbar (which I really want) and just get two golden buffs from the feed store. Those two could of course be quarantined together.
 

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