British Columbia

Mounties investigating after 2nd ostrich dies on B.C. farm facing cull order

RCMP say they are investigating after a second ostrich was found dead in suspicious circumstances on a B.C. farm where roughly 400 of the birds have been ordered killed by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA).

2nd investigation into an ostrich death on B.C. farm

A woman in plaid watches ostriches.
Katie Pasitney watches the ostriches on her mother's farm, Universal Ostrich, on May 21, 2025. (Camille Vernet/Radio-Canada)

RCMP say they are investigating after a second ostrich was found dead in suspicious circumstances on a B.C. farm where roughly 400 of the birds have been ordered killed by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA).

Though a kill order for the ostriches is in place, the CFIA has said the cull will be "humane", with "veterinary oversight." In the meantime, the RCMP are monitoring the farm to ensure overall safety.

This is the second investigation into an ostrich death at the farm this year, with RCMP already investigating after one of the birds was shot on March 21.

The latest investigation was first confirmed by the Canadian Press.

RCMP did not provide an update on that earlier investigation, nor did they confirm the circumstances of the most recent death, which farm spokesperson Katie Pasitney, whose mother is co-owner of Universal Ostrich, said occurred sometime last night.

Signs saying "Stronger Together" and an inflatable ostrich.
Signs and a prop put up by supporters of Universal Ostrich. (Camille Vernet/Radio-Canada)

In a series of videos posted to Facebook Live, Pastiney said the farm had lost a "big, beautiful, handsome" male bird and that there was a "clear entry wound and a clear exit wound."

She also said the farm had issues with drones in the area but did not want any "misinterpretations" and asked supporters to stick to the facts.

"We are not speculating," she said.

Pasitney said the farm is working with the RCMP and understands the investigation will take time.

"We're doing all the appropriate things," she said. "Just send prayers and love to the farm right now."

WATCH | Supporters gather at Universal Ostrich: 

People gather at B.C. ostrich farm to protest order to cull flock of birds

2 days ago
Duration 1:31
Demonstrators began gathering this weekend at Universal Ostrich farm in the community of Edgewood, B.C. They're there to protest a federal order to cull a flock of nearly 400 birds. As Radio-Canada’s Camille Vernet explains, it comes after the farm lost a court challenge of the cull last week.

A few dozen supporters have been staying at the farm since a court ruling was issued May 13 stating that the cull, first ordered by the CFIA in December 2024, would be allowed to proceed.

The judge did not weigh in on the scientific arguments of the case, ruling that the CFIA has a mandate from the federal government to handle cases like culls, and it would be inappropriate for the judiciary to get involved.

Instead, the ruling said the CFIA had followed the proper channels and policies in making its decision.

The CFIA has consistently said that after testing was done on two dead ostriches found on the farm in December, it was confirmed avian flu had entered the flock. At that point, their policy is to "stamp out" the entire population of birds who may have been exposed to the disease, a policy that has resulted in the killing of thousands of hens, turkeys and other domestic birds across the country.

Only one exemption has been granted, in the case of a turkey farm in 2022 where avian flu had been detected in two barns but not others on the premises, because those animals had been kept separate and safety measures had been taken to prevent the possible spread of disease between the different structures — conditions that do not exist at Universal Ostrich where inspectors observed wild birds, weasels and "unauthorized individuals" walking among infected animals, in violation of quarantine policy, according to the court ruling.

The CFIA says this policy is necessary in order to live up to Canada's international obligations for disease control through economic treaties, as well as to take every step possible to try to prevent avian flu from mutating and spreading further, potentially making it more dangerous to both animals and humans.

A herd of ostriches behind a chain-link fence.
Ostriches that have been ordered killed by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency at Universal Ostrich on May 21, 2025. (Camille Vernet/Radio-Canada)

But the farm and its supporters argue that while 69 birds died during the initial outbreak, the last death occurred in January, and since then, all the surviving ostriches are "happy and healthy" and should be allowed to live. They've called on the CFIA to conduct follow-up testing.

The local regional district has also voted not to receive the carcasses of any of the killed birds at local landfills unless follow-up testing is conducted and released publicly.

A white wooden sign on sparse green grass outside, an ostrich enclosure that has ostriches in it says Save our Ostriches in hand lettering with a drawing of an ostrich beside the lettering.
A sign stating Save Our Ostriches at Universal Ostrich farm in Edgewood, B.C. (Camille Vernet/Radio-Canada)

However, the CFIA said in a statement released to CBC News on Friday that "for poultry operations," which includes ostriches, "a single laboratory confirmed case of H5 avian influenza is sufficient to declare a premises infected, given how easily the disease can spread to other birds."

It says duplicate samples were collected from two dead ostriches at the farm on Dec. 30, 2024 and confirmed the presence of avian flu.

"Operational plans and dates for the humane depopulation will not be shared with the public in advance," the agency said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Andrew Kurjata

Journalist, Northern British Columbia

Andrew Kurjata is born and based in the city of Prince George, British Columbia, in Lheidli T'enneh territory. He has covered the people and politics of northern B.C. for CBC since 2009. You can email him at andrew.kurjata@cbc.ca or text 250.552.2058.

With files from Brady Strachan, Camille Vernet and the Canadian Press