Sarah Godwin runs a mixed egg, arable and dairy family farm near North Wraxall, in Wiltshire, with her husband and brother-in-law.
Her 32,000-laying hens would normally be outdoors for most of the day. They now have to be kept in their barns around the clock.
"It is terrible. We would love to see them out but it is just a necessary evil because the risk of them catching avian influenza is so high and the consequences are so disastrous for a producer, and for the hens as well," she explained.
But despite bringing the hens inside and putting in place strict biosecurity measures, Mrs Godwin remains "very nervous".
She said: "It only takes a tiny, tiny bit of contaminated muck from a wild bird or something that's been brought into the shed on somebody's boots.
"It's literally grammes that can infect the whole flock. And at that point, the whole flock has to be culled."


