Celie,So, if most folk, including the inspector, What good is the NPIP certificate anyway? I am afraid to let a vet who is visiting, God knows how many sick flocks, to come and contaminate my flocks!!! I have never had any health problems with any of my flocks and do not "visit" the livestock areas of friends with poultry. I take a special pair of shoes, in a bag with me when I go to buy or sell livestock, so there is no contamination possible. I have large bottles of waterless hand sanitizer, everywhere and if anyone wants to inspect a bird, etc. before purchasing, they must wash their hands before and after. I also have plastic bags and rubber bands for all shoes, that are properly disposed of afterward. I carry around a bottle of hand sanitizer with me and use it between going into each area. I bet the inspector taking blood does not change gloves or wash his hands between each bird? It sounds like these inspections, from what I am hearing, are spreading more illnesses than they are preventing! How could an inspector catch and inspect over 400 free ranging birds on a visit and keep a sanitary set-up? This SCARES ME !!!![]()
Same here, but HAPPY NEW YEAR, EVERYBODY!![]()
Funny, my part labs were the same way! They are afraid of thunder and was afraid of the fireworks, too! I woke up at 3:30 to find my big male lab, snuck into my bed and was scared to death! BTW he is half lab and half Chihuahua! LOL REALLY, but that's a long story!!!![]()
The birds I originally purchased as my starter flock were not as healthy as should have been. That was my fault for being uneducated at the time. My goal now is to raise birds not only for myself, but for show and sale. I can't sell birds across state lines without the NPIP. If that isn't your plan, you have no need for the certification. I also made sure the USDA vet had me scheduled first thing in the morning (so he hadn't been anywhere else) and he was as sanitary as I would expect from a vet working in the field and outside of an office. He also does not have to test every bird as, if one or two have something--the rest are likely to have it.
Ultimately your closed flock is the best way to go. I'm still trying to get all of the breeds that I want, so that means I have to get birds from elsewhere. All I have visited in our area have just not been sanitary at all. I'm disappointed in what I've seen.