Here they only do 10%Good morning Bob! Thank you. So if you have 100 chickens ducks and geese they have to draw blood on each one. Boy that would be time consuming.
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Here they only do 10%Good morning Bob! Thank you. So if you have 100 chickens ducks and geese they have to draw blood on each one. Boy that would be time consuming.
What do they do for NPIP?
You don’t test your own birds?Testing is done! It went well. No one had pullorum, and the swabs for AI will be sent out for testing.
I only got covered in bird blood once, and all the birds were well-behaved and held nicely still. Which my tester appreciates - she's had to do some really wild birds, so birds like mine are a nice change of pace, I'd bet.
Passed the inspection and all that. She said that she HAS had people fail. Which is kind of terrible, since you fail for the birds' living conditions being really bad.
Ciara was fascinated with her blue gloves again this year, haha.
You don’t test your own birds?
The inspection is done separately from the testing.Nope!
I'm not sure if they'd even allow it here to be honest, because of the inspection requirements.
I actually lock down 5 days before hatch for this reason... no screw up. Ducks just do their own thingSo, I set my duck eggs in my incubator on March 31st at 10am. I usually start the next day as day "one" (completion of day one.) So with that calculation, they'd be due on Tuesday, April 28th, right? I was going to lock down the eggs tomorrow morning (day 25) but when I candled this evening two of the six remaining eggs were already pipped, and all of them were pipped into the air cell internally. Yikes. Did I screw this up?
I just upped the humidity and took them out of the turner. I feel like an idiot.