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Me too! I have 4 already from a local breeder and can't believe they were ever that tiny and fuzzy, and they're just 5 weeks old now!
I've posted this in another thread but MPC actually has their own hatchery and sexers. I've emailed them to ask this very thing. They have hatcheries and breeding farms in various states in the US, they do this for bio-security reasons and to prevent losses of whole flocks if one happens to get a disease.
That is the spin they put on it. Their 'hatchery' is the space set aside for their orders at Meyer. MPC does not own a single hatchery or breeding farm. Most actual hatcheries don't own breeding farms either, they buy the eggs in. The primary reason for that isn't biosecurity, a farm that can produce enough hatching eggs for every breed that a hatchery requires would be enormous. Commercial farms raise certain breeds to provide hatching eggs for hatcheries.
Check the address label on your next order. It will have been drop-shipped.
Edited for briefness, from a response from MPC: "We're not a drop ship service, exactly. We do work with a hatchery, but use our own incubator space, employ our own chick sexers (for instance, My Pet Chicken is the only place in the country that sexes bantams), have our own breeds and so on. Our hatchery owns a number of breeding farms, and eggs are shipped to the centralized incubators from these disparate farms. These farms are located at a distance from the hatchery for biosecurity--if the worst should happen and a flock gets ill, it won't then affect ALL the breeding flocks. But they are a part of the network of our hatchery--they are not from a number of hatcheries.
But spreading out the laying farms--some, at least--is a common sense precaution in this business, and I would suspect all hatcheries do the same thing. Speaking commercially, you don't want the adult birds too close to the chicks, because a lot of the appeal of buying from a hatchery--any hatchery--is not only that you have so many choices, but also that the chicks are clean and healthy. Illnesses can be passed from hen to chick, but only with exposure. Our biosecurity measures are there to make sure that doesn't happen, so you can feel confident that your chicks will arrive without these diseases, but also without mites, lice, worms and so on."