chicken Jennifer Bryant chicken Jennifer Bryant

Bitchin’ Chickens with Claire

Claire Dineen and her veterinarian friend do “tailgate necropsies” and share their findings on the Bitchin’ Chickens Blog. Fun conversation with some great info that is just the tip of the iceberg, check out her website for more information!

  • Carey: 0:00

    Hi, and welcome to the Poultry Nerds Podcast. I'm Carey Blackmon, and I'm here with my co host for the show, Jennifer Bryant, and we're here to help you figure out how to raise the healthiest, happiest, and highest quality birds possible.

    Jennifer: 0:24

    Poultry Nerds, we are here with Claire, go ahead and introduce yourselves and tell people where they can find you.

    Claire: 0:30

    Sure. My name is Claire and I am the person behind the WordPress blog Bitchin Chickens. You can find me on WordPress, so it's It's Bitchin with a B I T C H I N, chickens, all one word, dot com. I'm on Facebook and Instagram as Bitchin Chickens Farm, and I'm also on YouTube as Bitchin Chickens.

    Jennifer: 0:56

    I didn't know you had a YouTube channel. Do you do all your necropsies on there?

    Claire: 1:00

    No, I haven't. I haven't. I was presenting this year at the the Backyard Chicken Summit. I don't know if you know it. It's an, it's American. I'm Canadian, but I was one of the two foreign presenters and you have to make a video. So it's when it's 25 to 30 minute video and then be available on the day of the summit. Your video goes live. There's 6, 000 people who can sign up for all the different events and then answer questions. So I thought I should set up a YouTube channel for my video and then I've started making smaller videos. And when I get it, this is a podcast, but I have been interviewed by Cable TV and so I've put up the little videos there. But I think the necropsy stuff on video would be great because the person who's doing the necropsies with me is somebody who is a veterinarian but also has a master's degree in avian pathology and has worked as an avian pathologist for more than 35 years and she's a fantastic teacher.

    Jennifer: 2:13

    Oh yeah, you should do that, like a whole channel of that stuff.

    Carey: 2:17

    Oh yeah, that would be cool.

    Claire: 2:19

    Yeah I'm, okay. So I'm in my early sixties. I'm not really technologically inclined. I've had to teach myself a lot of this stuff. I have younger coworkers that I say, what's this or how to do that? So I found a, I don't even have a cell phone. The cell phone I do have is a work one, but I found it, it has a fantastic camera, but also can make videos. So I think that is what I am going to start doing. This veterinarian doesn't live here full time. She's going to retire here and she has a home. And so she comes here every few weeks and we do what's called tailgate necropsy. She's got a big pickup truck and what we do is we spread out a big white, sheet. We do the necropsies outside and she wears her lab jacket and, explains everything. So I do, we do make those necropsies. into blog posts though. So there'll be like a case. And so we'll look at what the symptoms were. And then we cut open the bird and I take lots of pictures and then she explains what she sees and she's pretty accurate at getting a diagnosis.

    Jennifer: 3:30

    Wow. So I first found you an article came up on my feed, and I want to say a year or more ago, the one you did on lash eggs. And it was so fantastically written that still to this day when people comment about lash eggs, I still direct them to your website to read that blog article.

    Claire: 3:49

    Thank you.

    Jennifer: 3:50

    Very detailed, very good, written.

    Claire: 3:52

    Thank you.

    Jennifer: 3:53

    So today we're going to go through some common things that we see on social media that new people might think that they have, but don't necessarily have.

    Carey: 4:04

    So when I first heard the term bitching chickens, I was like, what is this? So obviously I had to hit Google and check everything out. And I started reading some of the articles and like she commented a while ago. Some of these are extremely detailed about their topic. And I like how you do include a lot of pictures. Here's one from October the 24th tailgate

    Claire: 4:36

    necroposy

    Carey: 4:37

    with her, and yeah, pop tailgate down, go through everything piece by piece. There's a lot of picture here, talks about what's going on, what you found, how it could be. what the options are. It's very detailed.

    Claire: 4:55

    I am an educator by trade in a different field. I work at a community health center for people. And my job actually is to go out in the community and I do workshops on a variety of issues. So I think I have a good sense about reading the room or, understanding who the audience is. And I just started working on the blog trying to refute a lot of the misinformation I see online. There's so many. Online groups and so many blogs and some of them are good and some of them are not and some of them have good information but also woven in that is Misinformation,

    Carey: 5:36

    right?

    Claire: 5:37

    You know my Blog has people who don't have chickens and may never have chickens, but have found chickens are interesting, or they might have had them and they miss having them. To people who are considering chickens, and want to do all the reading and preparation in advance, to people who've had chickens for a number of years, I also have a number of veterinarians, vet techs one of the people that I collaborate with works at a veterinary teaching hospital and she's a lab scientist. So all of those people I get information from, I bounce the articles off, but also we write articles together.

    Carey: 6:20

    Yeah, that's, and for me, that's one of the reasons why I started doing this podcast and several of the things that I'm involved in because you go through Facebook groups looking for stuff and people will tell you things that, they sound good. But once you start doing your homework and doing a little research, you find out that they are far from accurate. That's why Jennifer and I we decided, hey, look, when we do this, the topics that we discuss, we're going to talk about. Facts, things that we know to be true so that I really like that about your page. And I like another thing I liked about it that I noticed is when somebody goes to your page and they, just a home page. If they scroll all the way down past the first several, you've got categories. And I really like how you have a lot of this stuff broken down. Talk about some of those and how you go through categorizing everything and all that.

    Claire: 7:31

    Yeah. So I like my homepage. I chose that WordPress. Theme without even knowing anything about blogging and it turned out to be good because there's a lot of stuff right on my homepage so that people don't have to scroll through. There's all at the top are the latest articles followed by what I call a bit different things that are interesting that people might not be able to find elsewhere but would have a hard time maybe, searching for online and the whole bottom is around health issues. And when you get to all of those categories, if you want to find the old ones, there's an arrow that says older articles or archives, but there's also a search box. I now have 750 articles that I've done in the last six years. So I'm a pretty prolific writer. So if people want to find something from five years ago, they can just put in there. Something simple, not a long sentence, but egg binding, or lash egg, or something like that, and then everything that will come up that's related to that. I've tried to write articles from you're just thinking about chickens and know nothing, to you've had chickens for a long time, but maybe here's something you hadn't thought about. Also, after a while you write articles and you think what interests me? It's not just about thinking about an audience. You want to write something for yourself and keep yourself interested. So I've done a whole series called having chickens is a great way to meet your neighbors. I live on a small island. I've been here about 24 years and I'm known as the chicken lady, but there's a lot of conversations you have when you have chickens and sometimes it's people who don't even have chickens. I've got some wire, would you like it? Or, I have an egg customer who tells me an interesting story. So this is a series, I'm almost at number 50 and it's a combination of a profile about those people as well as their birds. So it's like, how did you get here? And what did you do beforehand? And all of those kinds of things, those kind of I've also got a series called, When Art Meets Chickens. So I profile artists, writers, and crafters who incorporate work that has chickens in it. So it could be sculpture, painting, jewelry, pottery, a book, poetry, all kinds of things. Whether they have chickens or not. And I've interviewed people from around the world for those, that series. That sounds

    Jennifer: 10:09

    super

    Claire: 10:10

    interesting and fun. It's totally fun. Like I, I interviewed. An Inuit woman in Greenland, whose English was her third language, about getting chickens in Greenland. And it's called Chickens at the Top of the World. And she was feeding them seal meat and having a heated coop over the winter because it gets so cold. And she had to import her chicks from Denmark. Because, there aren't chicken hatcheries in Greenland.

    Jennifer: 10:45

    I just have to know, how did that work out? Are they still there? Did they survive? Yeah, they are

    Claire: 10:49

    still there. And she sent me cool pictures like the Northern Lights over her chicken coop on the ocean at the top of the world. Yeah.

    Jennifer: 11:02

    Chickens are everywhere.

    Claire: 11:03

    Chickens are everywhere. They are the most populous bird species in the world. And everybody has stories. I'm just writing about a guy, an American who's married to a Cambodian woman and they live in Cambodia and he raises bantam chickens that are specific to that area.

    Jennifer: 11:25

    Wow. It's like the universal language of chillaxing.

    Claire: 11:30

    Yes,

    Jennifer: 11:31

    it

    Claire: 11:32

    is. When people are divided by politics and all kinds of things. But if you just talk about chickens, it does bring people together.

    Jennifer: 11:41

    It does. So let's talk about some common things that people might think that they have in their coop when they're just getting started. So what's the one thing that you see most often that You're Oh, that probably isn't what it is, but let's talk about it anyway.

    Claire: 12:01

    Oh yeah. There's, there seems to be a list of things that come up, and regardless of what the symptoms are, it's lash eggs, egg binding, coccidia And often it isn't. And I think let's even go back before that. Oftentimes, and I've written about this, people just write on Facebook groups, My chicken is sick. Help. Or, My chicken died. What do you think it is? And what I suggest is, You write down every symptom about what happened. Was your chicken limping three weeks ago? And two weeks ago, did it develop a cough? And a week ago, did it stop eating? Or, are any of your other birds sick? Has anybody died? What have you done to examine your bird. And people are like, oh, I'm afraid to pick it up. Sometimes you have to pick up your bird and feel, is its keel prominent? It's not eating. What color is its poop? I've done a whole article about poop and how to interpret the output. Is it green? Is it black? Is it red? Is it slimy? Those things. give you an idea about what's going on internally, right? Look at its feet, all of that kinds of things. Look, if it's drooling, look inside its mouth, take pictures, take a video, and then you post your question. Because I think a lot of people rush to try to help. Without getting the full information and I'll tell you a little story when I was a kid. My mother and I were in Mexico and we were a little lost. And so we went to a group of three men on a corner and said, do you know where whatever is. And all three of them said yes, and all three of them pointed in a different direction. All three of them wanted to be helpful, and they weren't doing anything to deceive us. I think that there's a need to want to help. And so people try to do something. When they don't have the skills, the ability, the knowledge to do that. And so it's really hard for a newbie or somebody who's not familiar with the condition to weed out what it is. Because you can scroll through the responses and you can get ten different diagnoses. Get antibiotics, don't use antibiotics, isolate your bird, kill your bird, all of these things. So I think that you have to find a really good source. That's based on science. And the reality is when you're on Facebook, Anybody can say anything and it doesn't get screened.

    Jennifer: 14:49

    That is a true statement. And I will have to tell you that I have been banned from most of the large chicken groups. Have

    Claire: 14:58

    you? Yes, I have. And sometimes they won't even tell me why it even places that I thought I had a good relationship. I'm suddenly blocked. There are groups that refused to talk about euthanasia. And I think that's a really big one that they will not allow any conversations. And so my mentor, Dr. Vicki Bose, who's a veterinarian and avian pathologist. is horrified by that. If you cannot take it to a vet, if your bird has a terminal condition, if your bird is in pain and suffering, and pain can be physical pain, but also fear, you need to do something about that. You can't just put your bird in the coop and hope it dies in the morning. You wake up the next day and it's not dead and you just keep letting it go. Because people often say, my bird has been ill for weeks. And those groups say, try antibiotics, try this home remedy, try, Epsom salt

    Jennifer: 16:06

    baths. Oh my God.

    Claire: 16:07

    So let's put it this way. If you were sick and on death's door, would you want to be stripped naked and put into a bathtub? I've been giving my chicken a bath every day for a week and it's not getting better. It's probably, in shock. Yeah.

    Jennifer: 16:23

    Just out of curiosity, how many Epsom salt baths have you given chickens?

    Claire: 16:28

    I give them for. bubble foot. And I've given it for vent cleat when I'm trying to clear off. I've only ever had one case of vent cleat, trying to clear off all of that stuff to find out what was underneath. But it's not, my chickens do not get bathed on a regular basis.

    Jennifer: 16:50

    No, I've never done an Epsom salt bath, ever.

    Claire: 16:54

    Epsom salt, it has the word salt in there, it is not a sodium, it is a magnesium. You can't substitute table salt, because Epsom salts come from Epsom, England, and it is a magnesium, that's a drawing thing. If you had an infection, You might use Epsom salt.

    Jennifer: 17:17

    Makes sense. But a bath is going to stress a bird. Because it's not normal. And so if it's already stressed because it's sick. You're just stressing it more. Yes,

    Carey: 17:30

    and a lot of people don't realize that and like for like in people When you're more stressed your immune system is not good It makes it worse. So your conditions worse. Don't go dunking it in a bucket of water

    Claire: 17:46

    Nope, and I think about okay if you were sick, what would you want? You'd want a nice cozy bed, be warm, and have somebody bring you something nice to eat or drink. Your chicken probably needs to be isolated in a quiet, darkened place where it's warm, and allow it to, allow it, to see Is it eating or drinking? Is it pooping? And try to monitor from there.

    Jennifer: 18:15

    Yes I 100 percent agree. So let's just go through a couple of these. Let's start with lash egg because that was how I was introduced to you. So I have never had a case of lash egg here. So tell me how you would. First, make your list of symptoms and then come to that conclusion.

    Claire: 18:34

    Okay, so LASHAG is a common term for salpingitis, and that is a bacterial infection in the oviduct. So it's, tends to be an accumulation of different bits of an egg and bacteria. And over time, so at first they look like little rubbery things, but over time they take the form of an egg because they're in the oviduct. It's not an egg. It's formed by the oviduct and then it has lamination. So if you cut it in half, it looks fantastic. It's all these little layers. of pus and yolk and other things. I've never had a bird pass a lash egg. So sometimes people say, I found this weird rubbery thing. in the nest box and I don't know who it came from. So I asked my mentor, Dr. Bose, what would you do? She said sometimes when they are small like that, the infection is encapsulated in the lash egg and it gets passed. You don't have to do anything. You also need to determine who it's from. And often online advice says it's a bacterial infection, therefore Give everybody antibiotics. If you have a flock of 30 and only one has a bacterial infection, you do not give antibiotics to 29 other hens. I have found lash egg or self meningitis upon necropsy. And so you cut the bird open and it's wow, this thing was inside. And at that point, it was too big to pass. And at that point, it's too big to save, because you can give that bird antibiotics, but where does that mask go? It's not going to pass. I do know people who've spend money on a bird to remove like a mouse from egg yolk peritonitis. Because it's the size of a baseball, it's not going to come out, but there's no guarantee that's not going to get repeated. So I think when you find something rubbery, weird, cut it open, it's clearly not an egg in the nest box, it's a wait and see. If you've got a coop cam, great. If you, and you know what, you asked what the symptoms are. Sometimes the symptoms are nothing until death. I've been totally surprised when I found my first salpingitis, or I've had birds that look pretty good. And then I looked at them and I thought, Oh no, here's somebody that's sick. And they hide those symptoms so well. And if you're at this time of year, I leave. early in the morning. So my birds aren't up. The automatic door opens when I come home. They're already in or on their way to bed. I don't see them until the weekend. So it's really possible that a hand on Sunday could go downhill by the end of the week. And then it's already too late. That would be, what do you do so you can send your bird for a necropsy where I am in British Columbia. We have the ministry of agriculture that subsidizes necropsies. So your first submission of a calendar year, which includes up to six birds, if they died around the same time of the same cause for 25. Dollars. I've heard of other states where they charge 300 or some places like teaching veterinary hospitals where they're free. So you can send that bird in and you can ask for a number of things make sure that you know what you're getting and what you're paying for because some people real didn't realize they paid for the gross necropsy, but no microscopic work, no lab work. Or you can do what I call a DIY necropsy. I've written an article about it. Make a list of all the symptoms and then you take your bird and you cut it open and Trying very carefully take pictures of everything as it looked when you opened it up and then very carefully Remove every organ take a picture front and back and make a note did something smell was something Too big or too small hard soft, was there bile did Yep Yellow liquid goes spurting out any of those things and then you can post it online and that can you can often see Tumors on a liver or salpingitis or something? You don't need to spend three hundred dollars on that and so the series that I have with my mentor is That people send me those pictures or I collect them. We look at them and then We call it best guess or, show and tell. Sometimes we call it gore fest, depending on what it is. And some things she can look at and like she can say, I know exactly what that is. And then other things she'll say, I don't know, but it could be this or that. And if it was this is what I would do. And if it was that, sometimes it's about monitoring. Sometimes it's about how did a bird to this state. when it probably should have been euthanized long ago. Really allow birds to suffer. And I know they're resilient and I know sometimes they will survive. But if you're going to have catastrophic injuries, you need to look at pain management as well. This idea that people say birds are stoic, therefore they don't experience pain. Of course they do. If you just had your wing ripped off, or your leg ripped off, or you got attacked by a predator, you're in pain. If you've got a mass inside you. So one of the things I'll talk about is that penguin stance. So when you see a bird walking totally upright, like a penguin it's usually a couple of things. Ascites, which is water belly. It's an accumulation of fluid in the abdominal cavity. And at first, it's probably totally pain free and the bird can survive just fine. But as that fluid accumulates, it starts to pressure, press on the internal organs. And so that bird is walking upright, trying to take that pressure off. That bird's in pain. The other thing it might be is a mass. And a mass could be salpingitis, sometimes it's cancer or something. You'd be amazed at what you find on a necropsy and you think that bird looked relatively normal on the outside and what was going on in the inside.

    Jennifer: 25:32

    First I'd like to also say that it's important to know what you're looking at. First, we also need to define necropsy for people who don't know what they are. That's when you dissect a deceased animal look at what's going on the inside in order to see what may have happened and you can do it yourself or you can pay your Department of Ag in your state to do it. If you also butcher your own chickens for your meat supply, you will learn as you go what it should look like. Harvesting Cornish that will enlighten you pretty good at what you shouldn't be seeing in there. I saw my first we're getting off topic here, but I saw my first I think they call it spaghetti breast.

    Claire: 26:22

    Have

    Jennifer: 26:24

    you heard of that?

    Claire: 26:26

    I have,

    Jennifer: 26:27

    I saw my first one this year and the breast meat, it literally looked like spaghetti noodles. But it also had grass in it. Somehow the grass had made it all the way into the breast meat. It was not good looking.

    Claire: 26:43

    No, you don't want to eat it.

    Jennifer: 26:46

    No, you didn't want to eat this.

    Claire: 26:48

    No, and people post Cornish necropsies, like they butchered them, and then they show a liver and say, Oh, what is this? You don't want to eat any bird that's had filter organ issues. So the kidneys and the liver. So it's like you're going to toss those ones. And so it can be tumors. It can be cancer, can be Marek's disease. So Marek's is one we can talk about. Marek's and Leukosis both cause tumors and they are often very similar in their symptoms. Marek's tends to affect birds around. 7 to 10 weeks or around sexual maturity doesn't usually affect older birds. I've had Marix in my flock and Dr. Gose did the first necropsy that diagnosed Marix in my flock and that bird was 21 months old. She said in three decades, that's the oldest bird she had seen with Marix. If it's leucosis, it takes far, it's a very slow developing the tumors. So it takes much longer. So if you've got a two year old bird, it's probably leucosis, but you really do need a professional necropsy to determine those because leucosis can spread from hand to chick through the egg. Whereas Merrick's doesn't.

    Jennifer: 28:14

    So what would be the symptoms of the two?

    Claire: 28:17

    Okay. So Merrick's. They form tumors in different places. So Merrick's can form in the eye. It's called ocular form of Merrick's and often it's a gray eye. And on Facebook, any weird looking eye, everybody screams Merrick's. It could be cataracts. It could be glaucoma. It could be a penetrating injury. It doesn't have to be Merrick's. Merrick's eye is quite, it's often gray. And then it can form tumors on the sciatic nerve. So limping is a big one. People often talk about my birds limping and they look at the foot. But the limp might actually originate internally. So if there's tumors on the sciatic nerve, you're gonna get limping. And when they curl their toes, so it looks like they're forming a fist, and they walk on, it's called knuckling, so they're actually walking on their knuckles. That's typical of Marix. There can be a visceral form of Marix. So the internal organs have tumors. It can also be, there's neurological. So you get tumors on the brain and I've had a number of birds with Merrick. So I've seen what it looks like. I haven't had leucosis, but they share some of those same things. They both form tumors.

    Carey: 29:38

    So tell me this, if you have a bird that has marriage, what do you do?

    Claire: 29:41

    Okay. So I panicked when I read that first necropsy. So I sent birds and they came back positive and I thought this is the end of my flock. I have to kill everybody and I will never get birds again because Marix can live in the soil in the environment for five years. So I called Dr. Bose and I was like, Oh my God, what am I going to do? And she talked me off the ledge. She said, Marix is not the worst thing you can have. And in fact, probably. Every small flock has Marix. There is more than one strain, and not every flock will become symptomatic. Why my flock did after having 10 years of birds, I don't know. And not every bird will be positive in a flock, and not every bird who has Marix will die. And that has been borne out with me. So the first year, I had a mother and three of her chicks, and I'll die of Marix at different times, and then the next year I had nothing. And then for the next three years, I've had two young birds die, and they've always died around 10 weeks or around sexual maturity. And that's it for my whole flock. What she said is keep your birds healthy because Marix is triggered by stress. So all your birds carry something, it's if I walk into a room and I have a cold and I'm coughing and sneezing, not everybody's going to get it and not everybody who breathes in my germs is even going to get it. So what you're trying to do is build up healthy immune system and reduce stress. Stress is often caused by lots of fluctuation of birds in and out of a flock, people start off with a few and we call it chicken math, right? So they got you, but now they want. They want a brown bird, then they want a black bird, then they want a green egg layer. And I liken it to what happens if you lived in a house with four roommates and you liked them and everything was going and then your landlord decided they wanted to move in a few more. Oh, and then they moved in a few more without asking you, right? And that's how chickens feel. They are flock animals. They have a hierarchy and a pecking order, and you keep disrupting that. And that's a really stressful things and birds will kill other birds out of that stress. So think about. If you're a newbie, what's your maximum? And I would suggest you get your maximum at the very beginning and not do this in and out thing. And in and out also is more likely to bring pathogens into your flock. Something that even a healthy looking bird might carry.

    Jennifer: 32:34

    Yeah, we did a podcast a few weeks ago on quarantine. And that should limit that, but the stress that you're talking about, like if you're at work and you get stressed and your neck and your shoulders start hurting, that's a physical response to your stress.

    Claire: 32:51

    And

    Jennifer: 32:51

    so the birds, when they get stressed, they're going to have that same kind of physical reaction. And their immune system is more delicate than ours and it's going to impact it.

    Claire: 33:02

    Sure. You have a, what's called a flight or fight response, and that's about cortisol. It's meant as a surge to get you out of a, an emergency situation, but when you're under stress, you are releasing that cortisol into your system all the time. And in people, it makes you sick, but it does in animals too, so I would, it was, it's about understanding your flock dynamics. It's about, have there been any predators around are they competing for water, for food, for roosters, for nest boxes, make sure you have multiples of all those things. Sometimes. Pecking occurs at night when people are fighting, or chickens, are fighting over the roost bars, all of those kinds of things. And a lot of

    Jennifer: 33:53

    this stuff can be handled through just simple observation, 10, 15, 20 minutes.

    Claire: 33:59

    You learn a ton of things. From your birds. And people say things like, Oh my roosters are fighting and nobody's dead yet. They'll work it out. That's stressful for both the winner and the loser, right? It doesn't matter that they're not necessarily drawing blood. It's stressful.

    Jennifer: 34:18

    So I have to tell you a little story, and you'll appreciate my little story. So I had a turkey hen, and her name was Fannie Mae, and she was really, she was a witch. And every night, she would be the first on her roost. And then the chickens and the other couple, I had a, it was a mixed flock at the time. And the chickens would get up, and they'd be the last ones up there, and she'd wait just before dark. Just right when they can't hardly see again. And she'd put her head down, she'd turn sideways, and she'd bulldoze every one of them off that roost. And then they would end up sleeping on the floor underneath of her, and be covered in poop and everything else in the morning. So it took us a while, some observation every night to see what in the world is going on in this coop. And that darn turkey, I'm going to tell you, she lived to be like six years old. The simple fix was, because for the turkeys I used two by eight, We just took some like six inch pieces of board and screwed them straight standing straight up and we made bedrooms on the roost. Oh, she was so mad. She would get up there and she'd be so mad, but the tickets could then stand, on the roost. And she couldn't bulldoze them off anymore. But just that simple observation fixed the entire problem.

    Claire: 35:44

    I think just sitting, take a coffee out there and watch them and you'll learn, who's the dominant and who's not. I've heard of stories where if you have an automatic door or a door, the dominant one will stand just inside the coop and stop them from coming in at night. And the door goes down, but just watch all of those, but you'll also see who is standing off on their own and who's fluffed up a bit, who see, sometimes when chickens are sick, they seem to be eating, but when you watch them really closely, it's just pecking mindlessly. I think it's like a instinctual behavior, but you realize, yeah, they're pecking at food, but they're not really eating. And then you realize, oh, this is a sick bird.

    Jennifer: 36:32

    Yeah. So do you medicate your birds very much? Do you have a medicine cabinet?

    Claire: 36:38

    I did my whole presentation at the Backyard Chicken Summit on first aid kits and health checks. And in my first aid kit, I've got, tons of stuff. Medication, no. What I've never used antibiotics. I haven't had a lot of bacterial infections. In Canada, we have to go through a veterinarian to get drugs. You can't just buy them at Tractor Supply. I have a really good first aid kit. It's like two taco boxes. And I've got all kinds of stuff. But

    Jennifer: 37:13

    like what kind of stuff?

    Claire: 37:15

    Wound care, I've got dressings and vet wrap and calcium and different vitamins vetericin, antibacterial spray, polysporins with, okay, here's something people say you can't use polysporin with cane in it, like the suffix cane, they say, Oh, it's toxic on chickens. I asked Dr. Bose and she said, those studies have been done in canaries and small birds, not in chickens. And actually it's better to use like a polysporin with pain relief because that's probably the only pain relief they're going to get. So that's something that's said on Facebook all the time. Do not use pain relief. That's not. So I have a lot of Oh I, so when my hen had vent glee, it's a yeast infection, right? So it's similar vaginal yeast infections in women. And so I went to the pharmacist and I looked and the The name brand stuff was so much more expensive, Monistat or Conestin or something. So I went to the pharmacist and I asked him if this no name brand was equivalent. And I said, it's for my hen and I think he thought I was using a euphemism because he went through his speech and he said, Oh, is there any chance she's pregnant? And I said, hens don't get pregnant. And he was so embarrassed, so I have things like that. Monostat, kinestin. So with a vent glee, you not only have to put it externally, you have to insert it with the plastic applicator inside the vent and also give them a pea size amount of the cream or a cut up tablet orally. I just gave it to my, I had the cream on my finger and the hen ate it every day. I didn't have to worry about trying to jam it into her.

    Jennifer: 39:17

    So I've never had vent glee. So how common do you think that really is?

    Claire: 39:22

    Okay. I've had chickens for 15 years and that's the only case I've ever had. And it was the quintessential case of stinky vent. What was coming out of her and it took 11 days to totally get better. People think it's pasty butt. Pasty butt is something that chicks get. Vently, there's a totally different thing that hens get.

    Jennifer: 39:45

    Correct. Yeah.

    Claire: 39:47

    But, I don't think it's that common. I think a lot of things that people say are not that common. And another thing is, Should you deworm or not? So people say I found this worm and it's typically a round worm in a poop. And I asked Dr. Bose about that. And she said, all chickens carry parasites. The reality is it's not unhealthy unless your bird already is compromised or there's a large load of worms, but they can coexist with those. So you don't want to just keep. giving them medications on a regular basis to try to get rid of worms all the time.

    Jennifer: 40:30

    So deworming, which I've never done either it causes its own imbalance, which is just swinging you the other way. And I just want to throw this out there because it's a pet peeve of mine on Facebook. It's not a preventative. You can't prevent a worm from crawling around something. Yes. You either get rid of it or you don't have, you can't. I know.

    Claire: 40:50

    Yeah. Yeah. It's not like a flu shot prevents you from getting the flu. If they don't have worms, worming them is not going to treat anything, right? And so you're giving birds drugs on a regular basis. And people often say, Facebook folks, prescribe antibiotics. Nobody except a vet can prescribe, but they're prescribing antibiotics for things like viruses. Viruses are not, don't respond to antibiotics. They're antibacterial. And also, when I talked to Dr. Bose, she's really good because she'll say, Oh, I see that they used a certain kind of antibiotic and it's the wrong antibiotic. And I said what do you mean by that? She said they're targeted. There's a whole class of drugs and antibiotics are not interchangeable. Some of them are used for different things like your infections or broad spectrum or, various things. So you need to have the right antibiotic. the right dosage and the right way it gets into them.

    Jennifer: 42:01

    Let's talk about one more thing. Sour crop. Again, something else I've never seen in my flock. So have you?

    Claire: 42:09

    I had a crop issue once, and I think by the time I saw it and I felt it, it was an impacted crop and I was doing the whole thing about trying to massage it, trying to break it up, withholding food. And at about day 10 I was thinking, oh, I am not gonna be doing at-home surgery. And suddenly I pushed this. And I felt a pop under my finger, and it must have been encapsulated, whatever it was, and she was just fine after that. But sauerkraut is about stuff that gets held there food or other things in the crop, and then they start to ferment.

    Jennifer: 42:54

    People who don't know, I like to call this, the crop is more like a grocery bag that you're just holding food in before it gets to the digestion part of it. There's not actually anything other than that going on in the crop because the chicken will eat and then when it gets to a safe place that it's comfortable. Then it will start processing the food, so

    Claire: 43:22

    and I often get it like eating hay, something long, but something that can already have molds and things on it as well. You never want to feed your like people say, I've got moldy bread. Can I give it to my birds? You never want to give mold. You could cut mold off, but you're not giving moldy food to your chickens because that mold Goes and sits in their crop. Hey, that's why

    Carey: 43:47

    everybody needs pigs.

    Claire: 43:49

    Yes Sometimes you just have to think would I eat that right? Yes I know chickens eat everything but not everything is good for chickens or this idea that Oh chickens won't eat anything that's bad for them. They eat screws. They eat nails. There's all kinds of things chickens will eat. They peck at things before they even know what it is.

    Jennifer: 44:10

    Yeah. Yep. We're going, we're getting on to our time here. But we want to make sure that people understand that it may be new to chickens or thinking about chickens. It's, these things are the exceptions to the rules. It's very possible. You'll go 15 years without having a sick bird. It's not This is not something you're gonna wake up every day with and have to see and have to have a hospital ready for your chicken

    Claire: 44:37

    No, it's I okay. You'd be really lucky if you went 15 years I've had vent prolapses three times. I've had Merrick's I've had You know some predator injuries, various things through necropsies You But you do need to have a good first aid kit, and be prepared for that because, I had a dog that would eat things and it always happened at night or a long weekend and then it's an emergency and often people are posting on Facebook. The vets closed till, Monday and now it's Friday night. What do I do? And they have nothing in their first aid kit and they're scrounging around. So what I suggest is go through your house and look for things that you can already use, start assembling those things in one place. And sometimes if you have to buy something in quantity, I split it and I split the cost with my friends. So if you don't need a big thing of whatever but it's good to have an assortment of things on hand.

    Jennifer: 45:44

    Yeah. I can see that. I don't have a first aid kit myself, but I, me and Carrie are a little bit on the different side for that, but for the backyard keeper, I can, you have to have some things. I have things for the dogs and cats and stuff. I'm a little bit more ruthless with the birds. But I breed for resistance and that's a thing too, so you just have to sit down and decide what kind of bird keeper you want to be. Do you want to be somebody who's constantly hospitalizing birds or do you want to be somebody who enjoys their birds and they have a purpose on your property and or in somewhere in between? You just have to decide for yourself.

    Claire: 46:28

    So The person who works at the veterinary teaching hospital that I talked about, that's one of my collaborators. She spent 10, 000 on open heart surgery for her bird. And I've written a blog and I have some of the operating room video. This bird's case went to conferences around the world. She made People Magazine, right? Not everybody is that person. Wow. Yeah, wow. It made for a very, it made for a very interesting case study. But, it's stressful for you. It's stressful for the bird. So you need to be prepared for what those things are. You need to have some, another thing people don't have is, Where to put a sick bird. I don't have room in my coop, they say. And, so you have to have a dog crate, be prepared to put it in your garage or your basement or in your house. You can't leave a sick bird with the flock. And if you can keep it separate, then you can really monitor what it's eating, what it's drinking, what it's pooping.

    Jennifer: 47:35

    Yep. Yep. But you don't have to, you just have to be aware and make decisions. and be prepared to follow through on those decisions, whichever kind of birdkeeper you want to be.

    Claire: 47:48

    If you're not the kind of person who euthanize, who physically can't euthanize your own birds like me, I'm worried about screwing up, but I have a number of friends that I could call and they would euthanize my bird with using cervical dislocation. It's the fastest, most humane way. And I wouldn't let that bird suffer. But I definitely have euthanized younger birds, and even though I know it's the right thing to do, it's still difficult.

    Jennifer: 48:24

    Yep, it is, and it shouldn't be easy. You should, you're taking a life, and you should be aware of that.

    Claire: 48:30

    For sure.

    Jennifer: 48:32

    Alright, Claire, it's been a pleasure having you today.

    Claire: 48:35

    It's nice to meet you too.

    Jennifer: 48:37

    And we'll be back next week.


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The Livestock Conservancy

n this episode, we sit down with [Guest Name], a member of the Livestock Conservancy, to discuss the vital importance of preserving rare and heritage livestock breeds. Learn about the organization's efforts to protect endangered breeds of poultry and how these efforts impact biodiversity, sustainable farming, and the future of agriculture. Whether you're a farmer, animal lover, or sustainability advocate, this conversation will shed light on the critical role these breeds play in ensuring food security and ecological resilience. Tune in to discover how you can support conservation efforts and help safeguard our agricultural heritage.

The noble mission to protect America’s endangered livestock and poultry breeds from extinction. This group find some interesting items and organizes historical documents plus tons of educational materials on their website at www.livestockconservancy.org

  • Carey: 0:00

    Hi, and welcome to the Poultry Nerds Podcast. I'm Carey Blackmon, and I'm here with my co host for the show, Jennifer Bryant, and we're here to help you figure out how to raise the healthiest, happiest, and highest quality birds possible.

    0:16

    Mhm.

    Jennifer: 0:23

    We are here with the biggest nerd, maybe of all time, poultry nerd, Jeanette from the Livestock Conservancy. So we were just chatting and forgot to hit record. So we're starting over again. But Jeanette, welcome to our show.

    Jeannette: 0:41

    Oh, happy to talk chicken anytime.

    Jennifer: 0:44

    Oh we can do that all day. It's like the premise of the show. Tell us about the Livestock Conservancy. It's been around for what, 35 years now?

    Jeannette: 0:53

    Almost 50.

    Jennifer: 0:56

    We're

    Jeannette: 0:56

    actually going to have our 50th anniversary in 2027 and we're a national non profit and we actually got started because of the bicentennial when a bunch of living history museums came together. Wanted to showcase breeds that were around during the times of founding fathers and they couldn't find any of them and You know when they did finally You know track down a few it was a big red flag for American agriculture that these Breeds that had once been the backbone of the country were disappearing really quick in 1977, the Livestock Conservancy was formed and we've been around ever since and we work with all common livestock and poultry breeds that are found on farms and we have about 150 breeds that we Oversee conservation efforts with,

    Carey: 1:56

    I believe Jennifer might have had a little bit of a technical difficulty because she disappeared.

    Jeannette: 2:03

    Yep.

    Carey: 2:04

    Make myself a note. So with all that, what type of programs do y'all have to help continue breeds? I know that a lot of what y'all do is to help with awareness of the rarity of some of them. So tell us a little bit about some of that type stuff.

    Jeannette: 2:25

    Yeah we have a three pronged approach. And the first is it's, we call it discover, secure, and sustain. In the discovery phase, this is when we find animals that are potentially genetic resources that are in danger of disappearing, like old breeds or old flocks just recently we came across a flock of Jersey Buffs that have been around for over 30 years. 30 years and they're like the last of the Sandhill line of Jersey, buff Turkeys. And we were able to work with the owner who was having illness issues and get them placed in the hands of some a. Experienced turkey breeder that knew what to do with these animals. And, as a turkey breeder yourself, you don't just put any old male with any old female and think you're going to get a great animal, and getting animals like that into the. right hands is really important. As part of the discovery, we'll document, where the animals came from the history of the flock of the herd. The biology, what does it take to grow them out and breed them and make sure that they're well documented. And then the secure part is where for breeds that don't have stud books, we'll start stud books for them. We'll make sure that we do our best to make sure that owners of the breeds are connected with each other and start to develop a support network. We help people form breed associations. Every breed that has a strong breed club and a breed association, their breed's going to do well. So breed clubs are really important for the long term stability of a breed. And other things we'll do is research into their DNA, how they're linked to other breeds. Are there any differences with them? We're currently doing a DNA project on the part of the DNA that represents immune function. And the really interesting thing is our Rare breeds have things in their going on with their immune systems that are completely absent and commercial animals. Some really interesting things coming up in that. And then the sustained part of it is helping people connect with each other. Further help people with marketing the part where most owners fail with their endeavors with their animals is not being able to market them properly so that they, they don't become a money pit as everybody that's listening to this knows. Animals can become a money pit really quick. And so we help people to understand, what are the markets that you could tap into to sell animals or sell product. We have ongoing courses for breed associations to understand how to form a breed club, how to come up with bylaws how to serve your membership, how to put a board together, everything you could say. conceivably need to know about running a breed club or breed association. We've got those resources in our cultivating leadership series of webinars. And matter of fact, they're having a live webinar tonight, a Q and a for people that are have pressing questions about their associations and how they need help. And we do a couple of, two or three of those live webinars every year just to check in with folks to see, how their groups are going. And we do all kinds of work. We don't have animals at the office, but some of us like myself have farms and animals, but the Conservancy itself doesn't own any animals. It's our members. And our membership of the ones that have the animals another important thing about the sustain aspect is we have an online products and breeders directory, plus online classifieds. So they're rare breeds. They're hard to find, but this is the place to go. to go to find them. And that's all on our website livestockconservancy. org. Lots and lots to do. We're kept busy all the time. We do programming, sometimes live this year at the Dixie Classic. poultry show in Knoxville, actually in two weeks, we're holding a heritage turkey workshop and we brought experts in from all over the country that are some of the top people in turkeys. And we're going to talk about everything from just raising them for the holidays to breeding them, showing them, hatching them. And we also brought in a marketing expert to help people understand how to market their turkeys.

    Carey: 7:25

    See, when I saw that thank y'all posted it, I don't know, maybe a month or so ago, I was like, Oh, what am I doing? And I went, I looked at my calendar and I was like, Ooh, there's nothing on there. So I went back and I hurried up and registered for it so I could get my spot and I was all excited. Jennifer and I was talking about it the other day and she, and I was like I don't know if I'm going to come up like the morning of. Or the night before or what? And she said, it's Eastern time. And I was like, yeah, I'll be going up Friday night because I'm in central time. And yeah, no, I'm not a morning person. So I'm excited about that.

    Jeannette: 8:08

    Yeah, we got a really great collection of people there. And then Frank Reese is coming in from Kansas to serve as the judge for the Turkey show. And we'll have the turkey judging in the same room and it'll be an old fashioned table judging. And I'm hoping to mic him up so people can listen to him as he's evaluating each animal.

    Carey: 8:34

    That just made me even more exciting.

    Jeannette: 8:37

    Yeah it's gonna be great and I hope we get a good turnout because the instructors are really working their keisters off to make sure that we have a good class and pull it. I got to give snaps to Dixie. Um, poultry club, Tennessee Valley Poultry Club they've been amazing to help put this together and gave us the space and just rolled out the red carpet for turkeys. I give them a lot of credit for making the process easy.

    Jennifer: 9:07

    Do you work with the APA quite a bit?

    Jeannette: 9:10

    Yeah, we do. Matter of fact, we just successfully started a new committee within the APA dedicated to censusing. So we've got an official committee official census committee now. And what I'm doing is pulling together people from the different people that work with birds from different classes to come in to help with the census work. And we do a major national census every five years. And you want to talk about a beast of a project, trying to count chickens in the U. S. is An enormous task. And I know we don't find every single one, but we can see important trends with the breeds every time we reach out to folks and that helps guide our work in understanding what breeds need help, for instance, something like the booted Bantam, if you know anything about raising those animals, they're hard. They're really hard, if you're going to show them to have their leg feathers and good condition you need bigger doorways, you need specialized perching and, they're rare cause they're hard to show and and we had no idea they were that rare until we had a suggestion from APA about checking into some of the older Bantam breeds. And typically we don't do Bantams but we do the ones we do work with are ones with no large fowl counterpart. And APA had asked us to take a look at the numbers of several particular. Bantams like that. And the booted did come up as one that was particularly rare.

    Jennifer: 11:02

    Okay. I saw on there that you had the Cochins on the list. Are they moderately watched?

    Jeannette: 11:10

    They actually recently came off the list because with the backyard hobbyists. Their popularity's really skyrocketed, so they were just graduated from the list. But we'll still census them, because people are fickle. Some things are in, some things are out see, you never know, so they're included in the census. We count all the APA recognized people. Breeds that are in standard of perfection, so we'll keep an eye on them, but they're off the conservation priority list now.

    Jennifer: 11:42

    Gotcha. So before we started recording, you were talking about the crevs, which we've done a podcast on them before, but you got to go actually visit the castle where they originated from. You want to tell us about that?

    Jeannette: 11:56

    Yeah, that, that was a lot of fun. I've been trying to do it for years. My in laws live in France and not all that far from the Creve Coeur Anoche, and that's where the Creve Coeur breed originated was from that area and there's a great castle there, very well preserved castle, and finally got a chance to visit it and talk with the folks there. And it was very surprising. They knew very little about the history of the breed. And I'm trying to backtrack to get all my French references so that I can pass them on because they don't speak English. So I'm hoping I find my French references so I don't have to re Translate everything that I've got, but I've built a, an extensive history on the breed that's taken years and years to pull together because it's a breed that, there just wasn't a lot of solid documentation. There were mentions of it and one, one thing that was crystal clear is they were the top table bird in France for centuries. They were it. The first poultry show they had in Paris, there was a class for creve course and a class for every other chicken breed. They were very well thought of. And you had to pay a lot of money to have one on your table. And I I calculated with one of those, what was your dollar worth in 1902 or whatever. And back around 1900, it would have cost you in today's dollars, a hundred bucks to put a craft core in your table. It was they were very expensive. People would pay their leases or their rent with finished craft cores to the landlord. And And then the funny one I found out last year was in the first untethered balloon flight, the Monier brothers had three animals on the balloon. They had a sheep, a chi a duck, and a CREF Corps chicken So a Kreft Corps was in the first unmanned flight first maned flight in a balloon, a hot air balloon. I thought it was pretty cool. And when I go back to France, I find creve course pop up in the coolest places in, in art and, um, even in a church bell. I was at a big cathedral and the bell that they ring for mass I forget what you call the bell technically, but on the top of their bell was a crev core. Clara's day, so they just popped up all over the place and Normandy and Brittany and, um, I'm a history geek on top of loving poultry and when I can pull both together pulling history together on, on a breed is really what grabs people really grabs their attention when you know, there's so much more to that cow or this chicken and it's one of the real joys I have in learning things like that.

    Jennifer: 15:03

    So do you, all this research that you do, is that on your website or is that somewhere where we can access it to really get nerdy with it?

    Jeannette: 15:12

    Yeah, if you go to the breed pages I think the Crevcore history is in a PDF on the breed page. And if we so that one's out there and Another fun one to read is with the Sebastopol Goose. If you go to the Sebastopol page there was a really great article pulled together on that from a British counterpart who raised Sebastopols for many years. And We're slowly we've just got a new communications person in, so we're slowly putting more of that kind of information out there, but a few of the breeds have some great profiles on the page.

    Jennifer: 15:51

    That's great. So if somebody wanted to get involved with the Livestock Conservancy, what could they do?

    Jeannette: 15:58

    You could certainly join as a member. It's forty five dollars, and it's The best 45 you're going to spend, it's all a vast majority of it's going in directly to pull, livestock and poultry conservation and the programmatic work. We work really lean and we don't like to waste money. We want to put into conservation and so joining as a member all of the staff are members. That's how much we care about the organization. You could do the 45 a year or five bucks a month. And that gets you a basic membership, but different kind of levels to the membership. So you can get involved that way. If things are too tight and you can't be a member, then, use some of the products that our farmers are growing, visit the products, breeders and products directory and, buy from somebody maybe is that's local that has eggs from a rare breed or meat or, feathers, whatever. Um, if you can't afford to join them, make an effort to try and use some of the products that our people are raising.

    Jennifer: 17:05

    So the Turkey thing that you're doing at the Knoxville show, which is December 3rd, I think. Do you do those often around the country?

    Carey: 17:15

    It's on

    Jennifer: 17:15

    7th. Okay. Yeah.

    Jeannette: 17:16

    It's on the

    Jennifer: 17:16

    7th. Do you do those kinds of things?

    Jeannette: 17:19

    Not as often as we used to since COVID, a lot of the stuff has gone virtual and I think people still aren't traveling the way they did beforehand. But we do a lot of virtual webinars. We have a, if you go to our website. All of our webinars are on Teachable and you can access them that way. And we've got a wide variety of stuff on our social media pages. We've got one for the Livestock Conservancy. If you happen to be interested in sheep, we have the Shave Them to Save Them pages, and there's lots of educational material there. And we have a very quaint. Page two. And so lots of stuff on our social media as well. And YouTube. We have YouTube videos. We actually have a chick survey. Yeah. Yeah. We actually have a chicks in the classroom series which is, um, we were working with 4 H with their embryology curriculum that was for grades. I think we're on grade four. That's a requirement for the kids and rather than hatching commercial chickens, we connect local schools with farmers that can provide a heritage breed eggs. And so they're not only learning about embryology, but they're learning about the breed it's history. About why, conservation and the teachers love it, so that's another really fun thing we do.

    Carey: 18:55

    So last year At the beginning of each semester, I do this thing in my classroom where I talk about me and, just introduce myself. And so many of my students ask questions about chickens because they found out that I have a few, which, if you do a census you're going to get a lot of lies out of people that have chickens. because we're afraid our spouses will find out. But they asked me so many questions. So at one point I was going through some stuff in my barn and I found one of my older small tabletop style incubators that has like the clear dome. And I grabbed a bunch of eggs and I set them on my desk. And when Wednesday morning they started popping out and it was a huge disruption to the class. Everybody started having a cow. They were in amazement. Like the, our nursing program that we had down the hall, they were bringing students down there so they could watch it. It was one of the coolest experience, and a lot of kids really liked that, if any of our listeners are teachers, I would encourage them to tap into something like that because it's a really, it's a really good thing. It let me, as a high school teacher, teaching something totally unrelated to anything farm related or, It helps me teach them about responsibility and stuff because we took care of them in the classroom for a couple of days and the students got to take part in that and it was really cool.

    Jeannette: 20:29

    Yeah, typically our classrooms, they keep them for a couple of days and then they all the chicks go back to the farmers that donate donated the eggs. But what's. What was really gratifying was the extension followed up with gathering statistics from a survey of the teachers and the reduction in absence, improvement in science grades, improvement in interest in stem everything ran sky high throughout the entire chicks in the classroom program. And so we've got hard data to show that this really is an effective teaching tool where you can put some stats on it and say, the kids were engaged and, they wanted to come to school every day. Even if there was just the eggs in the incubator and not hatching. They still wanted to come in to check in, to see how the eggs were doing. Or to turn the eggs, a lot of them had incubators that didn't have automatic turners so that it could be more interactive with the kids. So you had an official turner every day. And that was a special reward for people and affected the hatchery a little bit. With a bunch of fourth graders messing around with the eggs, but that wasn't the point. And every classroom was able to hatch out stuff. They surprised me a couple of times. I was figuring I was only going to get maybe 50 chicks back and I ended up with like over a hundred, but Oh, I wasn't expecting that. So some years back,

    Carey: 22:07

    that one backfired on you.

    Jeannette: 22:10

    I can sell as many chicks as I raise, so I wasn't terribly worried, but it was unexpected I had to scramble and make a bigger brooder.

    Jennifer: 22:19

    It's not overly poultry related, but you started telling us about a project you were working on with the Choctaw Indians and pigs, so can you just give us a brief overview with that so people can see how nitty gritty, you do get,

    Jeannette: 22:35

    Yeah. Yeah. Actually I do have a chicken related archeology project. It's that's better with the San Diego Presidio and the Presidio is the original settlement by the military that was done during The time of the conquistadors, and they found chicken bones in the dig, and they, um, none of them were chicken people. And so they ended up, I don't know why, how they came to us, but they ended up coming to us and grilling us about chickens. And they said they thought they had discovered this weird dwarf chicken and they were scratching their heads. Why these chickens would be so itty bitty. And of course, as chicken people, those are called bantams. And one thing that they didn't know about the Spanish is the Spanish had specialized bantam breeds to serve as broodies. Because if you're having, as many of you might know, if you have a high volume egg layer, the likelihood of them brooding their own eggs is pretty slim. They just, they dump them and run. And in Spain, they had developed some broody breed breeds that were bandoms, which made sense. They have the high egg layers. And if you can get a little bird that eats very little feed to brood your eggs, then, you're That makes much more sense than bringing a big bird in, and you can have more of them in a smaller space. And what was really fascinating first of all they were, their minds were blown. They're like, what? They had no idea about that. So that's like a new chapter in the Presidio history. The other thing is that they have determined that if it were not for the chickens that the Presidio had, that settlement may never have survived because there were points where the supply chain coming up from Mexico was disrupted. And if it wasn't for the fact that they had a whole bunch of egg chickens there, they would People would have starved to death or become malnourished and and they've published these findings, which is really fascinating. Get to play with paleontologists every once in a while or archeologists And ancient DNA is now becoming of interest to archaeologists and the Choctaw thing you mentioned the current project we're working on is ancient DNA from Native American digs around the southeast. East and a lot of them had pig bones and we have a breed we work with called the Choctaw hog and we're comparing the DNA from the bones that have been found in the digs with the modern hogs to see if they are in fact genetically still the same animal that was being used by the Native Americans a couple hundred years ago. So that's That's writing history. It's not well documented what kind of pigs they had, everybody knew they had pigs, but knew nothing about them if, and certainly didn't know there's some still around a really exciting development is the Choctaw Nation now has the biggest herd of Choctaw hogs, but They had, they went from zero to the biggest herd just recently so it's very gratifying to reconnect the tribe with the animals that belong to their tribe. And they're, um, jumping into the project wholeheartedly. And I'm hoping that the Choctaw hog doesn't stay super rare and that, they get spread out to other parts of the tribe too.

    Jennifer: 26:28

    It sounds like you lead an exciting life and you find out all this cool stuff that, that some of us just wish we knew.

    Jeannette: 26:37

    Yeah, it really is. It's hard to sum up everything I do because I never know day to day. So I don't know why I'm so washed out here. Is that better? Okay. It's hard to say what I do day to day because. It's always different and it's all, I find extremely fascinating and and meaningful. What we're doing is basically saving diversity for agriculture. And any school kid can tell you about, Biodiversity and why it's important in, jungles and in different, habitats and, but the same is true for agriculture, biodiversity is really important and we can't take it for granted. And once you lose it, that's it. Like the Krevkor, they've been around since the 12th century and the animals that we use to create that breed, they don't exist anymore. So once the Krevkor is gone, that's it. They actually, one thing I hadn't mentioned was we're hoping to start collecting cells from all the Foundational rare breed chickens because as AI has become a huge threat to American poultry we're trying to save what we can just in case so I'm hoping that's going to be something I'll be working on this coming year. So yeah, lots of exciting stuff.

    Jennifer: 28:08

    Yeah. You're going to have to come back like every year and tell us everything you've done this year.

    Jeannette: 28:14

    I'd be happy to.

    Carey: 28:16

    That would be really cool if I could somehow just preserve the line of reds that I have. That would be awesome.

    Jeannette: 28:23

    You talk to me when this is over and we're we're just starting to put together a plan. We're waiting to see what the, the funding comes through, but that takes time for approval. One other thing I wanted to mention is that we are a resource for folks. We do offer micro grants. Once a year they open up in May and you have till August to put in an application, but they're up to 2, 000 and it, they're aimed for people already doing good work, rare breeds. They're not gonna, they're not typically money that we give to people to get rare breeds. We want to reward people that are already doing good work with rare breeds. And I'll tell you, there are a lot of proposals in for incubators and building bigger coupes and if it can take your work with that breed to the next level it, it's amazing what 2000 bucks can do for a poultry project. We had one project with cotton patch geese and the owner had a real challenge cause cotton patch get really aggressive during breeding season and they'll, smash eggs from rivals or they crush babies because they're too busy fighting. She was able to get a grant and modify the coop structure so that the pairs weren't beating each other up. And she went from 50 percent survivability to almost 100 percent of every gosling that she, she raised because she was able to make modifications in the coop to prevent all this stuff from happening. And, um, yeah, I think that's it. 2, 000 can go a long way for folks, or if you have, a bloodline that you'd really like to add to your program, but you can't afford to, pay to have them shipped or for you to go get them we can fund stuff like that. We fund poultry Fencing, if people want to do a better job with predator protection, we get a lot of folks that want to get electronet fencing so it, it'll fund all kinds of stuff, but the next one will open up in May, and you'll see on our website the winners for this year we'll be announcing that in January. There are a few poultry projects there, and there's a youth category too. So not just for adults.

    Jennifer: 30:53

    Oh, good. That sounds well, it has been a joy having you here today. We thank you. Sorry for all of the digital issues we had there at the beginning. So tell me the farmers, we're not tech people.

    Carey: 31:08

    If someone wanted to get involved and like help take part in the stuff that y'all do, how would they get in touch with y'all to do that? What would they need to do?

    Jeannette: 31:21

    They could certainly join check out our website, our social media pages if they want to contact us directly, that would be info at livestock, conservancy. org. And Yeah we love hearing from folks and so that would be the best way to reach us.

    Jennifer: 31:40

    All right. We'll have to have you back next year so you can tell us about all your cool stuff that you did.

    Carey: 31:46

    Thank you for joining us this week. Before you go, be sure to subscribe to our podcast so you can receive new episodes right when they are released. And they're released every week. Feel free to email us at poultrynerds at gmail. com to share your thoughts about the show. Until next time, poultry pals, keep clucking, keep learning, and keep it egg citing. This is Carey signing off from Poultry Nerds. Feathers up, everyone.

    32:14

    Mhm.

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