Urgent Reminder-PLEASE Quarantine Newly Acquired Birds!

Many of the deaths I've read about here and have received calls about go something like this:

'I rec'd this bird from x. Brought it home and didn't quarantine it. Within a week it was dead and now I'm worried about my flock!'

The assumption here is that the 'bird from x' was sick. That assumption can be very, very wrong. It is just as likely that the 'bird from x' couldn't handle the new load of pathogens that were present in the new coop and thus died.

Absolutely, that can happen, yes! Could be the owner's flock was the one who made the new one ill, certainly. No argument here!


Regardless of the source of the disease, I believe we both agree as to the need for sound management in the prevention and eradication of disease.

Agree 100%.
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You and I are in different areas and of course, you have many years more experience managing a flock than I do, though I have been around chickens since on my grandfather's farm as a child, just not caring for my own birds. Could be someone in a migrating path would experience instances of disease from wild birds more than someone in a different locale. As I said, I never said it does not happen, just that I do believe it's much more common brought in by the owner in some way.


Gypsi said:

So the odds of the survival of a sick bird are quite poor. And if it dies in flight half a mile away, or is eaten by a feral cat outside my fence, it is not going to spread disease to my chicken.

This I totally agree with--how many sick-looking wild birds have you actually seen? I only recall one many, many years ago in my suburban yard with a swollen eye who let me come up to it and touch it, way before I thought of getting my own chickens. I've seen a dead wild bird on very, very rare occasions, but with the predators here, a bird, dead or ill, is eaten quickly.

Of course, the original intent of this thread was to remind folks not to just throw birds into their flocks without a nice, long quarantine period, not necessarily to say if the new bird is at risk or the flock is at risk--could be a little of both in some cases. Quarantine is not perfect, but it's the least a chicken keeper should do to try to mitigate the risk of adding new birds. I don't want to get off track here by debating wild birds vs buying new birds.​
 
I am new to Chickens and wondering about birds that have come from the same flock. I bought 3 pullets from a farm and two weeks later am going to get 7 more from the same flock. They have only been apart for two weeks. Should I still quarintine or should they be ok?? Does this count as being apart at all??
 
Yes, you should always quarantine. You have no idea what the flock you're getting your new ones from have been exposed to since you got the others. Most often the exposure is from wild birds which have probably been all around the supplier's flock (as well as yours!). Best to be safe.
 
It's good to keep in mind that quarantine is to protect the new birds as well as your resident birds. Each population has its own underlying health issues. One key to bird health is to keep in mind that birds can be easily stressed, and stress can be the main reason an otherwise healthy bird can fall victim to illness - they normally can tolerate a certain amount of stress on their immune system and fight various illnesses. Throwing in the extra stress of being moved, and having to adjust to a new pecking order, can become the tipping point for some birds. If you can reduce the stress of introduction by doing it gradually, you can increase the odds that all birds concerned will weather the process without illness.
Even though the "new" birds would come from the same population as the birds you already have, their time apart has made them separate flocks and each has its own social structure - reintegrating them in a new environment (for some of them) is still going to be at least mildly stressing. Letting the new kids get used to you and your routine, and your facility, first, will help them integrate into your flock more easily.
 
Just a bump and reminder because of the number of posts I have seen lately about new birds going into flocks and then birds getting ill and or dying. Please quarantine all new birds.
 
Thanks for the reminder. ranchhand always bumped this thread when she saw a new influx of emergency threads with the "help, I bought a new bird and now my whole flock is sick!" cries. Since her birthday just passed, seems even more appropriate. Sally and I always were in agreement on this point, that's for sure! Even if someone buys a bird from me, even though to my knowledge, there has never been anything contagious in my flocks, they should still use the normal quarantine procedures. You just never know, so better safe than sorry!
 
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Thank you for the way you answered this. I never really considered the stress of adjustment to new routines and place. Your right they will be different flocks as our original girls are used to us and how we do things. Have picked up my newbies and have them seperated from the others. So far so good!!!! Thanks for the great advice!
 

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