PAUL
& SHIRLEY WALSH:

A Passionate
Flyer With An Incredible Record
4th ALL
AMERICAN LOFT OLD BIRDS LO- MIDDLE SECTION 2000
1st
ALL AMERICAN OLD BIRDS LO-MIDDLE SECTION 1999
by Alex
Cornella
Cornella
Family Loft
INTERNATIONAL
FEDERATION AWARDS
2001 OB
Champion Loft 2nd 5 - 25 Lofts
2001
OB Champion loft 5th -- 25 - 75 Lofts
2001
OB Hall Of Fame -- 25 To 75 Lofts 6th & 8th
Paul Walsh
is a fancier who is passionate about his birds and about winning.
For the retired captain of the Scranton (Pa.) Fire Department,
no detail around the loft is too small. His phenomenal race
record demonstrates what can be accomplished when hard work
and a winning attitude are applied. "I fly to win each
and every race I compete in," Paul says. "You have
to be on your toes and thinking all the time in this game or
you will be left behind."
Paul has
been a member of the Scranton Club since 1979. The Scranton
Club is part of the Lackawanna-Luzerne Combine (LLC), where
he serves as the combine race secretary. He is also the 1st
vice president of the International Federation of American Homing
Pigeon Fanciers.
In 1997,
Paul moved from his home in Scranton to the outskirts of the
city in Greenfield Township. He started over at a new location
and never missed a beat. Paul, his lovely wife Shirley and the
birds moved the day after the last old bird race was flown and
the LLC Combine average speed for the old bird series was sewn
up.
At the old
Scranton loft he won many races and average speeds, and his
competition was relieved to see him change locations, figuring
Paul made a big mistake by moving. "Everyone said I was
done winning because I moved off of the line of flight. I moved
from the short loft location in the club to the longest. But
the doubters were wrong, because in the last four years I have
won more than my share of races at the new loft," Paul
notes with a great deal of pride.
APPROACH
TO BREEDING
After years
of study Paul pays no attention to strains. His is only interested
in champion pigeons. "I am not a breeding station but a
skilled flyer. My view on breeding depends on the situation.
If l am going to breed for stock or flying," Paul says.
He likes
to inbreed for stock and outcross for flying. As a rule, he
does not put just any bird in the breeding loft. It must be
a champion or a daughter or a son of a champion. In the flying
loft he will let two birds mate the way they like and may or
may not take a pair of youngsters off them.
"I
have a rule here at Walsh Loft. Breeders are for breeding and
flyers are for flying. I do not ask my flyers to become my breeders,
even the race winners," he says.
Paul likes
to cite a story about Ad Schaerlaeckens, the famed Dutch flyer
and author. "When asked 'What
strain do you have?' Schaerlaeckens says the champions in
Holland and Belgium do not understand. What does this man want,
a strain or a good bird? This is because the majority of the
super birds in Europe are products of crossing."
Paul goes
on to question if 'pure strains' really exist? In Schaerlaeckens
opinion they don't. Paul also cites the example of Jan Arden,
a famous name all over the world for long distance. Now, some
decades after his death, many people in Holland claim to have
the pure Jan Aarden strain. "Most of them know better,
but the name sells! And what is the truth? Just like Hofkens,
Jan Aarden was always looking for the best. He bought birds
everywhere and though he was not a very successful racer, later
other fanciers were successful with the offspring of his pigeons,"
Paul notes.
Paul agrees
with Schaerlaeckens that American pigeon fanciers are naïve
when it comes to the issue of pure strains. "They show
off pure Bekaert, pure Wegge, pure Verheye, pure Hansenne, pure
Bricoux, and pure Huyskens van Riel. These names are completely
unknown to the younger generation in Europe," Paul says.
When asked,
"What is the best way to acquire new stock?" Paul
thinks the smartest method is to go to a loft in the neighboring
combine that is always in the diplomas. This flyer will not
have to compete against you with his birds. He more than likely
will sell you brothers or sisters to his winning birds. "They
are the ones you should be interested in. Not birds out of a
bird whose grandsire was a champ. I would rather have birds
out of winners or the parents that have bred multiple winners,
or even try to get the champions themselves," Paul says.
"A lot of auctions rarely auction off the winners themselves,
but back in the pedigree there was a great champ. There are
lots of pigeon dealers selling good birds, you just have to
be lucky to find the right one."
EARLY
BREEDING
In the past
Paul mated the birds together on Valentine's Day given that
January and February are cold months here in the northeast.
But today, with all the systems out there, you have to become
a systems player or suffer the consequences of your club mates
beating you. Whether you use the dark or light system, Paul
believes you must breed early to compete and his breeding season
starts Thanksgiving Day.
A health
program prior to breeding is followed. The importance of his
pre-breeding program is to insure optimum fertility and for
the reproduction of healthy young birds. Four weeks before pairing
he increases protein levels to around 18% to prepare the birds
for the stress of breeding. This is accomplished by adding 20%
protein pellets to the regular feed. Vitamins and minerals,
including calcium, are offered three times a week. Powdered
vitamins and minerals are added to the grit and changed every
other day.
Paul orders
all the vitamins and medications online from www.pigeonplus.ca
Three weeks before pairing he starts a 10-day course of a broad-spectrum
antibiotic to clear up any bacterial problems. "Baytril
may be a good choice if you have had a history of paratyphoid
problems. It is always best to base your antibiotic choice on
culture/sensitivity tests. Start a five-day course of canker
treatment. The drugs used to control canker are Ridzol, Emtryl,
Spartrix, and Flagyl.
Paul believes
it is best to treat three weeks before pairing up, then again
while on eggs. Two weeks before pairing he treats for coccidia
with Corid or Sulmit for five days and worms with one or two
drops of Ivomec orally per bird.
He then
increases light to 14 hours a day. He turns the lights on in
early morning so the birds have a natural dusk. If dusk is at
6 p.m., he turns lights on at 4 am and off at 8 or 9am. He says
then the birds should be given a rest from medications to decrease
the risk of developing resistance to these drugs and allow the
birds to develop some level of natural immunity.
According
to Paul, to fly young birds with success on a system, you must
have many early youngsters. Paul raises between 50 to 70 babies
for his young bird team. One thing he does to accomplish this
is to put the young birds on the loft floor in the breeder's
compartment when they are from 12-14 days old. This way the
youngsters of a cock that is driving and is not paying enough
attention to the youngsters will be fed by another cock or hen.
The added benefit is that the breeders go down early on the
second set of eggs.
Another
advantage Paul finds with this method is that he does not have
to spend the time to clean each and every nest bowl daily. He
just puts sawdust on the floor and the young birds lay on it.
At night he leaves a night light on in the breeding loft and
he has seen young birds getting fed at 5 am. "I have had
no problem with young birds getting scalped or beaten up, and
I am able to take a couple of young birds from my flyers and
put them on the breeding loft floor. The breeders pump them
up just the same," Paul says. "Just before dark it
is a sight to see six or seven cocks going to each and every
young bird to see if it wants to be fed. My young birds are
eating by themselves when they are real young and are flapping
their wings on the loft floor, developing muscle while other
flyers young birds are still sitting in the nest."
Paul advises
that vaccinating young birds is very important. He waits until
the entire young bird team is bred and moved to the young bird
loft, then vaccinates the whole group for paramyxovirus (PMV)
and parathyroid. However, he is reluctant to give both vaccines
at the same time.
TRAINING
YOUNG BIRDS
Early in
his racing career, Paul would take the young bird team 35 to
50 miles for their first toss, and they usually beat him home.
He has since stopped this training method. Now he gives open
loft prior to road training. Young birds loft fly daily for
one hour until some time in April. "I then increase loft
flying to twice a day, one hour each time," he says.
In May road
training starts and the young bird team will be in the crates
often. . There is a church two miles away from the loft he often
uses as a release point. "I train my birds myself. I do
not use a training truck or train with other lofts. This way
other birds are not pulling my team off my line of flight. I
am always sure of exactly where they were liberated and how
the weather is at that moment," he notes.
Anything
can happen on these early training tosses, so he picks a good
day and gives the birds plenty of time to get home. The next
liberation spot is six miles away and he will go there every
day, weather permitting, perhaps 10 to 15 times. At this point
the birds are starting to get into condition and he wants to
get in their heads that the crate is part of their life. From
the six-mile point he goes 15, then 30 miles, and once he gets
to 50 miles, he will sit there for a period of time. He will
train them out to 100 miles more then one time before the first
race. "I do not like to single toss, but prefer groups
of 15 to 20. I like to train youngsters on nice days, not like
I do with the old birds," Paul says.
At times
bad days cannot be avoided, so Paul is careful to bring the
birds back if he has doubts about the weather. "I like
to train with a head wind because the birds will get that usually
on race day as the season is changing and there is a lot of
north wind for young birds," he says.
Once the
races start, every young bird not entered in the race goes to
the 100-mile station on race day. This is done to keep the whole
team under the same type of stress each and every day. Young
birds are trained on line, but sometimes he will jump off that
line for a shock toss. Paul believes the shock toss will get
their heads back on right and you may win the week you do this.
"My
young birds are flown to the perch, widowhood or mated. It all
depends on the loft situation at the time," he says. Paul
will hold young birds back and not race them. He believes you
can race a young bird hard, but you can't race it hard as a
yearling. He will prepare some birds until they become yearlings
by just training hard and letting them fly one or two races.
When they
come home from a race they have a full hopper of feed in front
of them all day. After young bird season he vaccinates all birds
on the premises for PMV and paratyphoid. To play it safe, he
gives a paratyphoid booster three to four weeks later.
NEW FLYER
TIPS
"Probably
the best tip for a new flyer is to be quiet and just listen."
Paul says. "Don't be a know it all and be patient. Learn
how to become a handler first. All flyers want to start at the
top, but in reality, 99.9% of all flyers start at the bottom,"
Paul says.
Great pigeons
will not fly well if you dont know how to handle them
correctly. According to Paul, new flyers must learn to become
an observer of your loft and every loft you go visit. If someone
has mastered that and is not successful, the flyer should observe
what his immediate competition is doing and adapt. "If
a competitor is on widowhood or flying the dark system and they
are beating you week in and week out, then you better meet your
challenge and adapt," Paul advises.
He says
if you find yourself constantly on the bottom of the sheet,
try out a different health program, train harder or get an honest
opinion from someone you respect. Try to be honest with yourself
no matter the outcome. If you are always late, even if you have
healthy, well-trained birds, then changing and adapting will
do no good because the quality of the birds to do the job is
missing.
"The
systems are not for everyone and I do not care to be on one,"
Paul says. He flew the dark system one-year and had great success
with it, but decided it is not worth the trouble. The darkened
birds did win as old birds He also tried the light system, but
did not like the way the birds molted out as old birds. Paul
has since scrapped both systems, but may reconsider them in
the future. At present, hes more interested in old bird
flying then young bird flying.
Paul recently
refreshed and updated his Web site (www.walshloft.com), and
it contains a wealth of information that is useful to novices
and old hands alike. "I have made many friends through
this wonderful hobby and have enjoyed all the pigeon sport has
given to me. Whenever I can, I am only too happy to talk pigeons
and to share what I have learned with others," he says.
Contact :
"WalshLoft" Mr.Paul
Walsh
Phone: 910-575-8111
E-mail:
Paul@walshloft.com
Instant
Messenger: Slickpw