The word “biosecurity” refers to an overall system for protecting chickens from infectious diseases. Each backyard chicken keeper will approach biosecurity differently based on personal risk tolerances, but implementing even the most basic biosecurity measures significantly limits potential health threats to a flock.
 Biosecurity refers to an overall system for protecting backyard chickens from infectious diseases. Each backyard chicken keeper will approach biosecurity differently based on personal risk tolerances, but even implementing the most basic biosecurity measures significantly limits potential health threats to a flock.
Healthy chickens don’t stand a chance of remaining healthy if we schlepp pathogens into their yard. Potential disease carriers include: people, including you and other poultry keepers, clothing, shoes, equipment, (shovels, tractors, wheelbarrows, car tires) and all wildlife. Limit potential disease carriers from entering the chicken yard from high-risk locations, which include: all other poultry yards, poultry swaps, poultry shows, livestock auctions, fairs and feed stores.
Biosecurity refers to an overall system for protecting backyard chickens from infectious diseases. Each backyard chicken keeper will approach biosecurity differently based on personal risk tolerances, but even implementing the most basic biosecurity measures significantly limits potential health threats to a flock.
Avoid visiting other chicken yards, farms, poultry shows, agricultural fairs, chicken swaps, auctions or other places live birds are found during a poultry health crisis such as an Avian Influenza or virulent Newcastle Disease outbreak.
Biosecurity refers to an overall system for protecting backyard chickens from infectious diseases. Each backyard chicken keeper will approach biosecurity differently based on personal risk tolerances, but even implementing the most basic biosecurity measures significantly limits potential health threats to a flock.

Biosecurity Best Practices

  • Any potential carriers entering the chicken yard from high risk areas should be cleaned & equipment, disinfected.
  • Require visitors from high risk locations to wash hands, change clothing and wear disposable shoe covers or dedicated rubber-soled footwear before entering your yard.
  • Change your clothes, wear clean shoes and wash hands when returning home from high risk locations and when caring for sick chickens in isolation before tending to other flock members.
  • Clean then disinfect feeders and waterers regularly.
  • Empty, clean and disinfect chicken coops at least annually.
  • Don’t attract wild birds to the area with bird feeders or bird baths.
  • Control the rodent and fly populations in the chicken yard.
  • Never add birds exhibiting symptoms of disease to your flock. Contact state resources listed HERE for further direction.
  • Obtain necropsies when birds die under unknown or suspicious circumstances. Find your state veterinary pathology lab HERE.

Obtain necropsies when birds die under unknown or suspicious circumstances. Find your state veterinary pathology lab HERE. Require visitors from high risk locations to wash hands, change clothing and wear disposable shoe covers or dedicated rubber-soled footwear before entering your yard.

SANITIZING

I use un-activated Oxine to disinfect (1/4 teaspoon per gallon of water). Oxine is more effective and safer than chlorine bleach. Learn more about Oxine here and here. Bleach can be used in a 3:2 ratio of 3 parts bleach, 2 parts water. Other excellent sanitizers are Lysol and Virkon SAvoid bringing pathogens back to your chicken yard on clothes, boots, animal carriers/cages and shared farm equipment. Clean and disinfect & footwear worn in high risk areas such as other chicken yards, poultry swaps, etc.WHY QUARANTINE?

It is safest not to bring new birds from outside sources into a flock at all and very unsafe to bring new birds in from a flock that is not NPIP certified. If you choose to accept the risk of bringing birds from other flocks into your backyard, it’s very important to implement proper quarantine procedures.
A chicken can appear perfectly healthy while being a disease carrier. During times of stress such as moving from one home to another, latent diseases can become active, causing the bird to exhibit symptoms of illness and shed pathogens, infecting other chickens. A quarantine period provides the opportunity to watch for symptoms of illnesses as they emerge before exposing the rest of the flock to disease. Failure to quarantine properly can result in the death of all the birds.
Biosecurity refers to an overall system for protecting backyard chickens from infectious diseases. Each backyard chicken keeper will approach biosecurity differently based on personal risk tolerances, but even implementing the most basic biosecurity measures significantly limits potential health threats to a flock.

HOW TO QUARANTINE

  • Keep new birds at least 12 yards away from the existing flock. Some diseases, such as mycoplasma gallisepticum, can travel in the air.
  • Keep new birds confined and isolated in a dedicated coop, pen or other suitable housing area.
  • Don’t share equipment, clothes, shoes, feeders, waterers between the new birds & existing flock. For example: do not wear the same shoes to feed the new birds and then walk to the existing flock in the same, unsanitized shoes.
  • The longer a bird is in quarantine, the greater the opportunity for diseases to manifest themselves and be detected. Three weeks is the bare minimum recommendation, but 30-60 days is better.
  • During the quarantine period, testing can be performed if desired (eg: fecal float testing for worms, bloodwork for other communicable diseases) and a lice or mite infestation can be identified and treated.
  • Observe new birds for signs of illness including: coughing, sneezing, gurgling, red, swollen or watery eyes, eye or nasal discharge, paralysis of legs and/or wings, discolored combs/wattles, drowsiness, depression, uncoordinated movements, lack of appetite, failure to drink and/or unusual droppings (bloody, worms, diarrhea).
  • Once the quarantine period is over and all the new birds still appear healthy, they can be integrated gradually into the existing flock.

The Playpen Method of flock integration.

The Playpen Method of flock integration.

Kathy Shea Mormino

Affectionately known internationally as The Chicken Chick®, Kathy Shea Mormino shares a fun-loving, informative style to raising backyard chickens. …Read on

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The word “biosecurity” refers to an overall system for protecting chickens from infectious diseases. Each backyard chicken keeper will approach biosecurity differently based on personal risk tolerances, but implementing even the most basic biosecurity measures significantly limits potential health threats to a flock.
 Biosecurity refers to an overall system for protecting backyard chickens from infectious diseases. Each backyard chicken keeper will approach biosecurity differently based on personal risk tolerances, but even implementing the most basic biosecurity measures significantly limits potential health threats to a flock.
Healthy chickens don’t stand a chance of remaining healthy if we schlepp pathogens into their yard. Potential disease carriers include: people, including you and other poultry keepers, clothing, shoes, equipment, (shovels, tractors, wheelbarrows, car tires) and all wildlife. Limit potential disease carriers from entering the chicken yard from high-risk locations, which include: all other poultry yards, poultry swaps, poultry shows, livestock auctions, fairs and feed stores.
Biosecurity refers to an overall system for protecting backyard chickens from infectious diseases. Each backyard chicken keeper will approach biosecurity differently based on personal risk tolerances, but even implementing the most basic biosecurity measures significantly limits potential health threats to a flock.
Avoid visiting other chicken yards, farms, poultry shows, agricultural fairs, chicken swaps, auctions or other places live birds are found during a poultry health crisis such as an Avian Influenza or virulent Newcastle Disease outbreak.
Biosecurity refers to an overall system for protecting backyard chickens from infectious diseases. Each backyard chicken keeper will approach biosecurity differently based on personal risk tolerances, but even implementing the most basic biosecurity measures significantly limits potential health threats to a flock.

Biosecurity Best Practices

  • Any potential carriers entering the chicken yard from high risk areas should be cleaned & equipment, disinfected.
  • Require visitors from high risk locations to wash hands, change clothing and wear disposable shoe covers or dedicated rubber-soled footwear before entering your yard.
  • Change your clothes, wear clean shoes and wash hands when returning home from high risk locations and when caring for sick chickens in isolation before tending to other flock members.
  • Clean then disinfect feeders and waterers regularly.
  • Empty, clean and disinfect chicken coops at least annually.
  • Don’t attract wild birds to the area with bird feeders or bird baths.
  • Control the rodent and fly populations in the chicken yard.
  • Never add birds exhibiting symptoms of disease to your flock. Contact state resources listed HERE for further direction.
  • Obtain necropsies when birds die under unknown or suspicious circumstances. Find your state veterinary pathology lab HERE.

Obtain necropsies when birds die under unknown or suspicious circumstances. Find your state veterinary pathology lab HERE. Require visitors from high risk locations to wash hands, change clothing and wear disposable shoe covers or dedicated rubber-soled footwear before entering your yard.

SANITIZING

I use un-activated Oxine to disinfect (1/4 teaspoon per gallon of water). Oxine is more effective and safer than chlorine bleach. Learn more about Oxine here and here. Bleach can be used in a 3:2 ratio of 3 parts bleach, 2 parts water. Other excellent sanitizers are Lysol and Virkon SAvoid bringing pathogens back to your chicken yard on clothes, boots, animal carriers/cages and shared farm equipment. Clean and disinfect & footwear worn in high risk areas such as other chicken yards, poultry swaps, etc.WHY QUARANTINE?

It is safest not to bring new birds from outside sources into a flock at all and very unsafe to bring new birds in from a flock that is not NPIP certified. If you choose to accept the risk of bringing birds from other flocks into your backyard, it’s very important to implement proper quarantine procedures.
A chicken can appear perfectly healthy while being a disease carrier. During times of stress such as moving from one home to another, latent diseases can become active, causing the bird to exhibit symptoms of illness and shed pathogens, infecting other chickens. A quarantine period provides the opportunity to watch for symptoms of illnesses as they emerge before exposing the rest of the flock to disease. Failure to quarantine properly can result in the death of all the birds.
Biosecurity refers to an overall system for protecting backyard chickens from infectious diseases. Each backyard chicken keeper will approach biosecurity differently based on personal risk tolerances, but even implementing the most basic biosecurity measures significantly limits potential health threats to a flock.

HOW TO QUARANTINE

  • Keep new birds at least 12 yards away from the existing flock. Some diseases, such as mycoplasma gallisepticum, can travel in the air.
  • Keep new birds confined and isolated in a dedicated coop, pen or other suitable housing area.
  • Don’t share equipment, clothes, shoes, feeders, waterers between the new birds & existing flock. For example: do not wear the same shoes to feed the new birds and then walk to the existing flock in the same, unsanitized shoes.
  • The longer a bird is in quarantine, the greater the opportunity for diseases to manifest themselves and be detected. Three weeks is the bare minimum recommendation, but 30-60 days is better.
  • During the quarantine period, testing can be performed if desired (eg: fecal float testing for worms, bloodwork for other communicable diseases) and a lice or mite infestation can be identified and treated.
  • Observe new birds for signs of illness including: coughing, sneezing, gurgling, red, swollen or watery eyes, eye or nasal discharge, paralysis of legs and/or wings, discolored combs/wattles, drowsiness, depression, uncoordinated movements, lack of appetite, failure to drink and/or unusual droppings (bloody, worms, diarrhea).
  • Once the quarantine period is over and all the new birds still appear healthy, they can be integrated gradually into the existing flock.

The Playpen Method of flock integration.

The Playpen Method of flock integration.

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Dawn Hughes
Dawn Hughes
2025 years ago

How odd that I read this article on a day when we woke up to a roo who had been thrown into our yard at night. I got home from work in the morning and caught him, put him in our fenced in garden and then was able to let my flock out. Don’t know WHAT to do with this roo as I already have one and I have to bring him in at night d/t neighbor complaints of 4am crowing! Could use some advice.Love the sloggers and would like to win a pair. Thanks for all of the great… Read more »

Merideth
Merideth
2025 years ago

Sloggers are my go-to shoes for the garden and coop. Thank you for the bio security tips and the Sloggers giveaway.

Tracey Huffman
Tracey Huffman
2025 years ago

Someone mentioned the Sloggers keep toes from being pecked. That’d be nice. ThE hens like my pink nail polish :) I hate bleach and have not heard of oxine before. Thanks for that info!

Carol Stansberry Margerum
Carol Stansberry Margerum
2025 years ago

I am following your advice and ordering some Oxine today. Just got back from TSC and was surprised I couldn’t find it there. Maybe you can influence them to consider carrying it. They need little isle tags that say “Chicken Chick recommended product.”

Dawn Dawley
Dawn Dawley
2025 years ago

love your blog! I subscribe to your emails! Thanks for the chance to win!

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