Washingtonians Come Together! Washington Peeps

400


400


I never realized how difficult it would be to take pictures of chickens!

400
 
I have a few hens that HATE the other hen's babies...and will pick after the babies.
Then again, I have seen full grown Cock birds nestled over warming & protecting babies...so depends on the bird.


My Romeo and Miss Dixie a red banty and a blue frizzle cochin coparent....it's very cute, a roo that's a proud papa is even cockier! Lol
 
Last edited:
I assume for AI ? It is REALLY REALLY bad in Iowa & Minnesota. Our NPIP out here has mentioned it (AI) should "dry up" along with warmer drier weather...here's hoping !
From: Zack, Jonathan T - APHIS [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, June 12, 2015 11:09 AM Lyndsay M - APHIS; Frederick, Mandi M - APHIS Subject: HPAI Weekly Situation Report, Maps & Positive Premises 6.12.2015

Sent to the following: National Assembly, AAVLD, NPIP State Colleagues, VS All, EMLC, ICG Support Staff, LPA.

Attached:

· HPAI All Maps 6.12.15. Note Map/Figure 2 now includes Control Areas released by County
· HPAI Weekly National Situation Report, 6.12.15
· HPAI Infected Premises, 6.12.15.
[COLOR=1F497D] [/COLOR]
HPAI Response Information
[COLOR=1F497D] [/COLOR]
HPAI Outbreak 2014-2015 short policy and procedure guides[COLOR=1F497D]: [/COLOR][COLOR=336699]http://www.aphis.usda.gov/fadprep[/COLOR]
[COLOR=1F497D] [/COLOR]
HPAI Red Book, HPAI SOPs, HPAI education & training materials[COLOR=1F497D]: [/COLOR][COLOR=336699]http://www.aphis.usda.gov/fadprep[/COLOR]
[COLOR=1F497D] [/COLOR]
USDA APHIS HPAI Updates:[COLOR=336699]http://www.aphis.usda.gov/wps/portal/aphis/home/!ut/p/a1/04_Sj9CPykssy0xPLMnMz0vMAfGjzOK9_D2MDJ0MjDz9vT3NDDz9woIMnDxcDA2CjYEKIoEKDHAARwNC-sP1o8BKnN0dPUzMfYB6TCyMDDxdgPLmlr4GBp5mUAV4rCjIjTDIdFRUBADp5_lR/?1dmy&urile=wcm%3apath%3a%2Faphis_content_library%2Fsa_our_focus%2Fsa_animal_health%2Fsa_animal_disease_information%2Fsa_avian_health%2Fct_avian_influenza_disease[/COLOR]
[COLOR=1F497D] [/COLOR]
USDA Avian Influenza Web Page:[COLOR=1F497D] [/COLOR][COLOR=336699]http://www.usda.gov/wps/portal/usda/usdahome?contentidonly=true&contentid=avian_influenza.html[/COLOR]
[COLOR=0066FF] [/COLOR]
Dear National Assembly, AAVLD, and NPIP State Colleagues –

· States which have had positive highly pathogenic avian influenza cases in commercial premises, backyard flocks, captive wild birds or wild birds: 21 (AR, CA, IA, ID, IN, KS, KY, MI, MN, MO, MT, NE, ND, NM, NV, OR, SD, UT, WA, WI, WY)

· Premises confirmed for H5 avian influenza number 230 —209 commercial, 21 backyard (The commercial total includes 8 dangerous contact premises.)
[COLOR=5B9BD5]· [/COLOR]209 commercial premises = MN-108, IA-70, SD-10, WI-9, NE-5, CA-2, MO-2, ND-2, and AR-1
[COLOR=C00000]Note: The total number of commercial premises listed has increased by two due to the addition of two more MN “dangerous contact” premises (Otter Tail 4 and Pope 2) . These were designated as such several weeks ago and do not represent new positive premises.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=C00000] [/COLOR]
· Commercial poultry depopulated or pending depopulation:
o Turkeys: approximately 7.5 million (0 % pending depopulation)
o Layer chickens and pullets: approximately 41.1 million (4% pending depopulation – 3.5% in NE; p>
[COLOR=1F497D] [/COLOR]
If there are no further outbreaks or complicating factors to our current activities, all active depopulations will be completed within the next week.

Dr. Jon Zack sent the weekly situation report to all state veterinarians earlier today. If you did not get that email, please let me know.

Dr. T.J. Myers
Associate Deputy Administrator
APHIS Veterinary Services
Riverdale, MD
[COLOR=1F497D] [/COLOR]

Table 1: Summary of commercial and backyard HPAI findings by State

State

Total Commercial H5 Pos. HPAI Premises

Flock Type

Premises Pending Complete Depopulation

H5 Pos. HPAI Backyard Premises

Total H5 Positive Premises (Commercial + Backyard)

Presumptive Positive Premises (Pending NVSL Conf)
Turkey

Chicken Layer-Type

Other
Minnesota

108

103

5

0



0

1

109

0​
Iowa

70

35

35

0



1

6

76

0​
South Dakota

10

9

1

0



1

0

10

0​
Wisconsin

9

6

2

1

mixed

0

1

10

0​
Nebraska

5

0

5

0



3

1

6

0​
California

2

1

0

1

mixed

0

0

2

0​
Missouri

2

2

0

0



0

1

3

0​
North Dakota

2

2

0

0



0

0

2

0​
Arkansas

1

1

0

0



0

0

1

0​
Kansas

0

0

0

0



0

1

1

0​
Washington

0

0

0

0



0

5

5

0​
Oregon

0

0

0

0



0

2

2

0​
Montana

0

0

0

0



0

1

1

0​
Idaho

0

0

0

0



0

1

1

0​
Indiana

0

0

0

0



0

1

1

0​
Totals

209

159

48

2



5

21

230

0


Table 2: Detail of commercial and backyard HPAI findings


High Path Confirmation by NVSL

State

County

AI Type

Flock Type

Comment

9-Jun

IA​

Sioux​

20

H5N2 HPAI​

Backyard--

2500 game fowl
5-Jun

MN​

Kandiyohi​

40

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

44,000 turkeys
5-Jun

MN​

Brown​

5

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

39,000 turkeys
4-Jun

NE​

Dixon​

6

H5N2 HPAI​

Backyard


4-Jun

IA​

Hamilton​

4

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

19,607 turkeys
4-Jun

IA​

Sac​

8

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

42,202 turkeys
4-Jun

MN​

Renville​

8

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

24,782 turkeys
4-Jun

MN​

Renville​

7

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Chicken

415,000 pullets
3-Jun

IA​

Clay​

2

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Chicken

1,115,689 pullets
3-Jun

IA​

Hamilton​

3

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

17,250 turkeys
3-Jun

MN​

Kandiyohi​

39

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

37,007 turkeys
3-Jun

IA​

Hamilton​

2

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

36,205 turkeys
3-Jun

MN​

Brown​

4

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

15,884 turkeys
2-Jun

IA​

Calhoun​

2

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

13,385 turkeys
2-Jun

MN​

Blue Earth​

1

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

19.358 turkeys
N/A

MN​

Kandiyohi​

38

N/A​

Commercial Turkey

dangerous contact; 7067 turkeys
1-Jun

IA​

Wright​

5

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Chicken

434,831 pullets
1-Jun

IA​

Sac​

7

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

44,287 turkeys
1-Jun

MN​

Brown​

3

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

18,289 turkeys
1-Jun

MN​

Renville​

6

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

47,843 turkeys
1-Jun

SD​

Moody​

2

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

52,000 turkeys
N/A

NE​

Dixon​

5

N/A​

Commercial Chicken

706,924 layers; dangerous contact
N/A

NE​

Dixon​

4

N/A​

Commercial Chicken

202,365 layers; dangerous contact
29-May

IA​

Hamilton​

1

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

17,353 turkeys
29-May

MN​

Renville​

5

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

29,260 turkeys + 15,000 fertile eggs
29-May

MN​

Brown​

2

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

7,333 turkeys
29-May

MN​

Meeker​

10

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

4,932 turkeys
28-May

IA​

Wright​

4

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Chicken

991,500 layers
28-May

MN​

Kandiyohi​

37

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

26,379 turkeys
28-May

MN​

Kandiyohi​

36

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

50,849 turkeys
28-May

MN​

Kandiyohi​

34

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

17,686 turkeys
28-May

MN​

Renville​

4

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

48,860 turkeys
N/A

MN​

Kandiyohi​

35

N/A​

Commercial Turkey

Dangerous contact to K-34; 22,768 turkeys
27-May

IA​

Webster​

1

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Chicken

161,200 layers
27-May

IA​

Adair​

1

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Chicken

974,499 layers
27-May

MN​

Renville​

3

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

95,309 turkeys
27-May

MN​

Brown​

1

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

46,829 turkeys
26-May

NE​

Dixon​

3

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Chicken

293,241 pullets
26-May

IA​

Pocahontas​

4

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

20,731 turkeys
21-May

IA​

Calhoun​

1

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

13,385 turkeys
21-May

IA​

Sac​

6

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

25,841 turkeys
Pending virus isolation

IA​

Buena Vista​

16

H5​

Commercial Turkey

24,395 turkeys
20-May

IA​

Sioux​

19

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Chicken

149,095 layers
20-May

IA​

Sioux​

18

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Chicken

99,376 pullets
20-May

IA​

Sioux​

17

H5N2 HPAI​

Backyard


Virus isolated -- pending

IA​

Sac​

4

H5​

Commercial Turkey

43,438 turkeys
No virus isolated

IA​

Sioux​

15

H5​

Backyard


19-May

IA​

Sioux​

16

H5N2 HPAI​

Backyard


19-May

IA​

Sac​

5

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

28,391 turkeys
19-May

MN​

Kandiyohi​

33

H5N2 HPAI​

Commercial Turkey

42,600 turkeys
19-May

MN​
I live in Benton county Washington, a couple of backyard flocks were affected, one lost like 250 birds, not that that many were infected, but they had to destroy the whole flock..,their birds shared a pond with wild ducks and geese though and they had domestic ducks as well... There is a quarantined area around their place now that is said to be in affect for 2 years I think they said...I'd have to search for the article again...I'm so thankful that it wasn't too close to me...I don't have waterfowl, and my pond is so small it only attracts an occasional frog,.,it was on the other side of the county from me...we have a commercial egg plant in the next county, but it wasn't affected.,,they have doubled the price of their eggs in the stores though...10.86 for 4 dozen medium eggs!!
 
I should have clarified it better. Way back,... would have to look it up, was either mad cow or foot & mouth….but in the UK there were killing zones around the positive tested farms and negative tested animals, even non cows were destroyed. During all this in the United States, there was a governor in the NE of the US, think it was Minn. or Wisc. or…but they said if they had a case in their state they would destroy all livestock within a 40 mile radius.  This was then……Now, today, think it was in Eastern Wa. when the AI outbreak was found in the NE….i read there was door to door checking in the perimeter of the outbreak. The guy in the link in Virginia who was going to have his flock destroyed, had only received mailed eggs from someone in another state that had tested positive after the fact….It hadn't mattered that his flock tested negative. 


I'm in the se corner of Washington, the paper put us all on notice that if we had a bird die of unknown causes we were to report it...one farm in my county lost 250 birds...it was on the other side of the county and there is a quarantine zone around it, all the chick days at local feed stores still happened though...it blew east really fast!
 
Quote:
Thanks! There will be a roof 6" off the top of the walls, so they will be protected. I intend to make the poop hammock and see if that'll be sufficient as a floor. If not, It's easy enough to just add a hinged piece of plywood in there. When the weather cools down, they will definitely have 4 walls. I'm making a hinged removable section that's going to mount to the interior supports so that when it cools down, the chickies will have 4 walls to break the wind, but still allow them tons of ventilation. Worst case scenario is that I buy a little henhouse and drop it in the run if what I built doesn't seem like it's keeping them warm enough.


I will definitely post a few times looking for chickens. I'm still trying to put together a list of breeds I want. I'd actually love some suggestions.

Qualities I am looking for:
low tendency to be broody
not total jerks
decent egg production
I'd love a EE or something similar
Funny feathery stuff like feathers on legs or muffs.
QUIET. This is the biggest priority. If we get a hen that is really noisy, she either gets rehomed or eaten. We are in a relatively quiet neighborhood of smallish 1/4 acre lots and don't want to be "that" neighbor.

So far a few breeds that I think I might want are:
australorp
barred rock
cochin
ameraucana
EE
OE
 
I'm in the se corner of Washington, the paper put us all on notice that if we had a bird die of unknown causes we were to report it...one farm in my county lost 250 birds...it was on the other side of the county and there is a quarantine zone around it, all the chick days at local feed stores still happened though...it blew east really fast!
I ain't gonna tell anybody if I see a dead bird....

hide.gif
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom