@feather13
Honestly depending on the strain Mareks isn't that bad. I got it shortly after starting the flock (a chick from an NPIP certified breeder). The first year I did lose some birds, mostly adolescents I tried to integrate into the flock, but have not had a bird get sick in FIVE YEARS.
I am just very mindful of stress levels, if a bird is injured or sick I dose that bird with anti-herpes meds (which are very cheap) and I don't introduce chicks without a mother hen. My birds live completely normal lives, the Buff Orp is 7 or 8 years old and I have had 8 year old bantams. Keep in mind it is typically non-lethal in wild bird populations, and show breeders have told me they also breed for resistance (and they almost certainly have it too, just never see signs).
Though the Marek's vaccine is enabling much more lethal strains to spread. Sadly the vaccine is only making it much much worse whereas if people bred for RESISTANCE chicken populations would become resistant to it and it would rarely become a problem. Course chickens are "disposable" and breeding for resistance affects the profit margins and inconveniences people so virtually no one bothers.
@Sonya9 : Thank you so much for your post! It's very comforting. Watching birds die from Marek's is so horrifying, so I'm glad you've had luck. We currently have three Marek's-exposed, healthy 7 and 8 year old hens that never got sick. It does seem that the survivors of the first wave of virus can go on to live a good life. The only chickens 1+ years old that succumbed to Marek's in our flock were bantams and it was probably due to the stress of living with full-sized chickens (my mistake--I will never keep bantams with full-sized chickens again unless I have a large number of them).
Do you dose your birds with Acyclovir and do you get it from the vet? After reading your message I did a search and it seems that some have found Acyclovir, St. John's Wort and Lysine helpful in treating Marek's. We've never had a bird survive after showing signs of Marek's.
I had read about people having good luck with the Marek's vaccine in chicks introduced into an infected flock, but didn't know that it was creating more problems than it was solving
