Hunt Club Farm feeling the impacts of bird flu
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) โ Hunt Club Farm is a well-traveled local hot spot for birthday parties, Easter egg hunts and fall festivals, but it is currently feeling the impacts of the bird flu.
Joining their array of animals, like goats and horses, they usually keep hundreds of chickens. But as bird flu started making the rounds earlier this year, two of the birds died Jan. 23. In the coming days, it kept getting worse.
"And so then the next day, we had two birds die, and then we had zero the next day," said Randi Vogel, Hunt Club Farm co-owner. "And then on the 26th, we had five birds die. It was really alarming to me because we had a goose die, and our geese typically don't die."
Vogel said it was unusual amount of deaths. Workers with the Department of Agriculture took the four-hour trip down and tested the flock. Some were positive for bird flu, so all of them had to all be euthanized Friday.
"I would say that our chickens are the number one attraction at the club," Vogel said. "So we do a lot of different educational programs throughout the year, and we do a summer camp program and we're our petting farm, so we're open to the general public, but not right now."
This has their petting farm temporarily closed, and they do not yet know when it will reopen.
The state Department of Health told them they cannot buy more birds for another 120 days, meaning it will be months before they recoup the coop. However, they will still be able to host birthday parties throughout other parts of Hunt Club Farm and host some of their other programs.
Their advice to other chicken owners: closely monitor the health of the animals and keep their habitat as sanitary as possible.