Monday, December 23, 2024

‘Emotional time’ for B.C. poultry farmers who have to cull thousands of birds

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Mark Siemens is a third-generation egg farmer in B.C.’s Fraser Valley and he recalls his grandfather sharing a story about fighting an unknown disease that raced through the farm decades ago, forcing him to cull the entire flock.

Siemens didn’t expect to be facing a similar fight so many years later.

He noticed some birds seemed agitated a few weeks ago, showing symptoms of itchy eyes, and said he immediately called the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

The verdict was in by the end of the day: his chickens were infected with the highly pathogenic H5N1 variant of avian influenza.

“It’s super sad, and it’s a tough thing to go through when you know you care about these animals and you do everything you can to keep them healthy and make sure they’re looked after,” Siemens said in an interview.

His business is one of about four dozen flocks, most of them commercial, that have been infected with avian flu in British Columbia this fall. Infections flair during migratory seasons, as wild birds are considered the chief cause of infections.

Almost seven million birds have been culled at B.C. farms since the spring of 2022.

There were 45,000 birds on Siemens’ farm, including 30,000 egg-laying hens and 15,000 chicks.

“It’s a very emotional and stressful time,” said Siemens, whose barns are now “fully empty.”

“And you just feel like you have this daunting, overwhelming task of trying to get everything started again that really took years of building up,” he said.

They are now working to clean and disinfect, in collaboration with the inspection agency, to ensure that the barns are sanitized from “ceiling to floor.”

B.C.’s poultry industry raised its biosecurity level to red last month, the highest level.

Shawn Hall, a spokesman with the B.C. Poultry Association, said the current outbreak is very concerning for poultry and egg farmers, many of whom run family operations and the farm is their only livelihood.

Agriculture Minister Lana Popham said in a statement that the avian flu is taking a “heavy emotional toll” on poultry producers.

“B.C. poultry farmers are incredibly resilient, and I have seen firsthand how they come together to support each other during these challenging times.”

Derek Janzen has a poultry farm in Langley, B.C., and said he’s “very concerned” as the avian flu races through farms “like a wildfire” this year.

Janzen said he’s still haunted by having to cull his entire flock of 236,000 birds in December 2022, and has implemented a lockdown on his farm, keeping gates closed and minimizing any traffic.

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