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Had to put this in quotes because the first words are off the left side for some reason, weird!
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I'm not sure what caused her to do something that got the spur stuck in the first place, so maybe Ro was already hassling her and when Neela's legs got tangled up, possibly trying to get away from Ro, Ro just took advantage of the situation. Maybe she thought Neela was fighting with her, who knows? But, if I had not been in the barn, Neela would be dead, I'm sure of it.Wow what a luck girl Neela is that you saw everything happen. Why would Rowena continue attacking her though?
I know. And I just saw that a SECOND Brahma pullet is broody, Brandy. What the heck is going on right now? I'm ready for some good old boredom! I need to get back to my quilt!Jeez, it's always something! I hope she recovers well.
That article was from 2015. I'd never heard of "hot" strains. But it was an interesting read. I do not vaccinate and honestly, I never will. But, thought you might find their conclusions of some interest anyway.Thanks, Speckledhen. I'll have to read it although in 7 years, there's been no rhyme or reason to who gets Marek's and who doesn't. I can say all exposed unvaccinated chicks have gotten it. Vaccinated have not. My last batch is 10 silkies are 2 years old and still 10 silkies that I vaccinated.
Out of 7 chicks from 4 years ago from a hatchery, I have 4 left. They were supposedly vaccinated. One died at a year old. Lab verified Marek's. Then another at 1.5 year old. 6 months ago another developed paralysis that went from 1 leg to 2 legs to the wings. She was 4 years old!!! I have one hen who got paralysis at 8 weeks old. She was so cute I kept her in my bedroom as long as she kept her weight. After 6 weeks, she started to walk again and now she's 6 years old!
Problem is, for 80 -90 years, all research was done on birds that only lived a few years anyway (eaten). There were no long term effects because there was no long term. Now we have chickens that can live 5-10 years old, and most literature is kind of stale.
I have chickens up to 9.5 years old. All exposed or vaccinated. No age limit, and no reason that some get it and some don't. But chicks will get symptoms and die. Vaccinated is 90% or better resistant. Adults can die from it. Not to mention the lower resistance to common bugs like cocci, e. coli, staph, clostridia that exposure leaves them with.
I have a 4 year old rooster that I hatched, did not vaccinate, and he went to live with some horses until he was 4-5 months old. At 4 years he started limping yesterday. Now he's completely off the leg. I'm waiting to see if it gets worse or not. : (
Hot strains? From vaccinated chickens? I used to hear the opposite. There are stronger and weaker virus, but I don't put much faith in anything I read anymore.
Yeah, they've kept me on my toes for all of January and now, February is starting to show the same weirdness, ack!You must have your hands full with your bunch! I have a Polish hen who occasionally is found hanging by a foot in the fence upside down, LOL.
Tomorrow Dh, and I will be going to get the hardware for my coop doors, the pvc, the spigots, shut off valves, electrical wiring, breaker boxes, and outlets. While there is still a good bit of work to be done to finish it all up, it won't be too much longer, and I can bring my flock home.
Went to the oncologist. The news is not good, but could be worse. I will probably be starting chemo in about 3 weeks.