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Robert Plamondon's Poultry Newsletter

Avian Flu

I'm sick of hearing about avian flu. It's sooooo Seventies! If pigs had wings, avian flu and the swine flu non-epidemic of the Seventies would be the same.



I rank avian flu right up there with killer bees, the coming ice age, and the inevitable triumph of Communism. Thus, I recommend ignoring the issue entirely unless the government makes you pay attention. I don't advise breaking the law, so if the government loses its marbles and insists on killing my chickens, bye-bye chickens. Chickens are quickly and easily replaced, but money spent on lawyers is gone forever.



Looking back at what I've just written, I realize that what I've said is kinda short on facts. Well, in a nutshell, there's always avian flu around somewhere, but right now there's one strain that runs through domestic poultry like wildfire. If you're very sloppy, can infect you, too. How sloppy am I talking about? If you stop drinking chicken blood, you've done a lot to reduce your risk. That's how sloppy. And it hasn't even shown up in the U.S. yet.



Why this is a bigger news story than, say, exploding gerbils or man-eating cattle, I can't imagine.



News From the Farm

Spring is late this year. I haven't had to mow the grass yet, and some of the trees that are generally in full flower in early March haven't bloomed yet. Still, the rain is slackening and the weather is getting better.



I made a point of starting the tractor and running it for a while at least once a month, and this seems to be all it takes to make it start reliably. The same is true for the lawn mower and other devices. It's so simple. Why did it take me ten years to try it?



Several years ago, a refrigeration technician told us about the trick of using a window air conditioner as a replacement unit for dead commercial or retail refrigerators, which you can get more or less for free if their cooling units are shot. Instead of repairing the ancient compressors, you cut a hole in the side of the refrigerator and mount a window air conditioner in it, using the refrigerator's original thermostat in place of the air conditioner's (which doesn't go low enough). Total cost: less than $200, and the unit is a lot more efficient than the one it replaces. I have a writeup of this here.



Anyway, the air conditioner died last fall. Now that egg production is on the rise and we need both our old refrigerators, Karen took a look at the unit and discovered the problem was a dead overload switch. $10 later, it's running again!



Karen also discovered last week that, of her 100 broiler chicks, 101 had survived the brooding period and are doing fine up on our broiler pasture. Not bad for winter brooding! (The miracle of "negative mortality" is possible because hatcheries routinely add extra chicks to your order so they don't owe you any chicks if a couple die in transit.) Our early pullets are also out on pasture and doing very well, and the batch before that should start laying any day now.



We took a micro-vacation over the weekend, going up to Seattle on the Amtrak Cascades, which are great trains. Karl (who is 11) loves train trips and is very fond of Seattle as a destination. Dan (14), Karen and I wanted to attend Sakuracon, the big regional anime convention. (I probably don't have to explain what anime is anymore. There were 6,000 attendees -- lots more than when we attended regional science fiction conventions way back when.)



It's good to get away once in a while, but our busy season is about to start, and we probably won't get away as a family for more than a day until after Thanksgiving. Our neighbors did a wonderful job of taking care of the farm in our absence. It's great when you can find neighbors who can fill in for you once in a while!



I used to commute by train to Camas, Washington twice a week. If you have to spend almost five hours a day on a train, the Cascades are certainly the trains to choose. You can read a writeup of my commuting experiences.



Finally, Karen has accepted the post of Executive Director of APPPA, which is going to keep her about as busy as it is possible to be. She's having fun, though.



April To-Do List

Inspired by a similar list in Jull's Successful Poultry Management, McGraw-Hill, 1943.



Brood chicks.

Allow no poultry manure piles until frost (spread poultry manure on garden or fields)

Replace winter litter.

Give growing birds more room.

Stop using lights on hens.

Provide more ventilation for comfort.

Hatch baby chicks.

Gather eggs more frequently in warm weather.

Remove wet or soiled litter.

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