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In this game of pigeon flying the Champion Flyer has much knowledge and speaks
little , the Wanna be Champion
pigeon flyer has no knowledge and speaks lots with much
advice for all to hear..
Form cannot be brought about by
exercising your birds around the loft or by taking them on
training tosses everyday. It cannot be had via a Medication
bottle either! It is a natural thing and YOU can bring your
birds into form by simply using what God placed between your ears...your
common sense
If you want to
become a champion, Acquire Champion Blood, .
There is no
other way
Special Quotes: quotes from over 20
articles written by
Bob Prisco over the last 6 years There is no
difference between training a human or an animal athlete. They both need the
athletic ability, proper training, excellent diets, good health and hygiene
habits, plenty of rest, regular routine and stress free environments to stay
in condition and compete week after week. Good quality pigeons
living in an unhealthy loft will never show or reach their true potential. To
have healthy pigeons, one must have a healthy loft that possesses: plenty of
fresh air, dry, plenty of natural sunlight, secure, plenty of room for rest,
without stress, clean and disinfected, proper feeding and water conditions.
Drinking water
should be clean and germ free at all times. Clean water is the lifeline of
good health and a successful loft. Fanciers ask pigeons to make strenuous
athletic efforts to win. Therefore, it should be no trouble for fanciers to
keep fresh, clean drinking water in front of the birds at all times.
Healthy birds will
like to take a bath 1 or 2 times a week. Place a bath pan in the loft on a
nice sunny day with 2 tablespoons of bleach or a hand full of epsom salts in
the water. HEALTHY BIRDS ALWAYS KEEP THEMSELVES CLEAN AND PREEN THEMSELVES.
Nutrition and diet
play an important roll in keeping birds healthy and competitive. A fancier
should strive to provide his birds with clean, high quality feed that contains
a variety of premium grains. Each bag should be consistent with the same
type, quality and ratio / proportion of grains. Keep all birds on a
protein diet of 15-17% grain mixture and an assortment of various grains
(12-18 different types of seed) plus electrolytes, vitamins, minerals in the
water 2 times a week: Fresh grit daily, free choice of 21-28% protein pigeon
or poultry pellets, raw Spanish peanuts #1 grade, extra safflower and rice.
Peanuts are superior
to any other grain we can give our birds for racing. You should feed them in
raw form or as unroasted nuts. You should feed peanuts whole, with the skin
still on. This ensures that the birds will get the most value from the food
source. When peanuts are halved or crushed, they lose a great deal of their
nutritional value. The peanut is the first class fuel for our pigeons' racing
engines. Wheat-germ oil,
rich in vitamin E, is necessary during the breeding season.
A good trainer
always makes sure his birds have a proper diet (metabolism) to compete at
their highest levels. Breeders and race birds should never miss a meal or be
kept hungry or thirsty. Hunger may be caused
not by a lack of food, but an incorrect diet, deficient in the metabolic needs
to sustain prolonged flight or endurance. If the birds become very hungry
during the race, memory, fatigue, loss of weight, etc. can become serious
problems. Homing becomes secondary to the need just to survive, many times
causing the loss of the birds. We know that success
in racing and breeding pigeons start with good health and the fancier's
willingness to accept that an excellent diet, hygiene and medication program
is necessary to keep the birds healthy and competitive. It all starts with
your breeding loft. A "CHAMPION FLYER" is only as good as his breeding loft,
or source of birds, when he flies each race series. With many clubs having 3
different race seasons, you should give extra care to the breeding hens' diet,
by adding an excellent source of calcium and oyster shells. If you are not
breeding in individual breeding compartments, then you really do not have 100%
knowledge of both parents. You can always guarantee the hen, but occasionally
the cock may be suspicious. Along with good
health, breed from birds that have a good COMPASS OR HOMING INSTINCT AND
NAVIGATION SKILLS. Without both health and homing instinct, you are wasting
your time and money. To select breeders
and flyers is a very simple procedure. PERFORMANCE should be your only
criteria. Does the bird come from a winning family, generation after
generation of excellent race results? If the answer is yes, then the bird is
worth taking a chance on in the breeding or flying loft. There are only two
kinds of birds: GOOD ONES that can help you and BAD ONES that will cost you
time, money and aggravation with negative results. If a bird cannot help you
to improve your results in the flying or breeding loft, it is of no value and
you should cull it. Quality over
quantity. Do not over crowd your loft. Many times there is quality in an
overcrowded loft, but because the birds are overcrowded, their health and
performance is poor.
If it is necessary
to introduce new pigeons, a fancier should have a location that enables him to
safely quarantine and observe these new birds for a period of 3-4 weeks.
Regardless of where they came from, he should put them through a preventative
medication program. Before placing the birds in the section, it should be
completely sanitized with loft disinfectant, along with all feeders and water
containers at least 2 times, before placing the birds in the loft. Before you buy, keep
your mind clear and understand what you want and need. Buy on information and
results, not emotion and fancy advertisements, names or pedigrees. Do your
research and homework before you invest your money and your investment will be
rewarding and pay dividends. The pigeons in
Taiwan must possess the following qualities to have any chance to compete
successfully: Birds that have a strong history of successful young bird
racing in the past, generation after generation of young bird results in tough
hard races of distances of 100-350 miles; yearling races of 400-500 miles are
good signs of fast maturing pigeons with the necessary physical and mental
qualities; and bloodlines from a family of birds that have already proven
themselves successful in Taiwan's tough style of racing, especially in the
area in which you are racing. Tough weather
birds: Toughness is a very important characteristic that you should look for
at any distance when selecting breeders. Cull those that do not possess this
toughness or produce it in their children. Birds that come from
bloodlines that can perform at various speeds and distances are very
successful in the Taiwan style of racing. This shows a birds's ability to
handle different types of weather conditions and its endurance ability to fly
speeds necessary to compete with the leaders of the race. The birds that will
fly 100-500 miles at various speeds and conditions should breed children that
will do the same. LIKES BREED LIKES! Do not worry about
strains, famous names, or a certain family of birds at this time. You are
seeking birds that will handle your style and racing conditions from a
"PERFORMANCE LOFT". Stay away from
families of birds that mature at 2-4 years of age. These late developing
racers produce late developing children. Stay away from "speed families".
These birds fly short easy races 30-100 miles. They fly in good weather and
very easy land courses. They are not suited for tough racing, long distances
or duration of flight. Breeding two
families with the same qualities is OK, but breeding two families with
different qualities (one speed and one distance) is not. It is the long way
to success, that is if you ever succeed. The "MASTERS" of the sport practiced
one breeding theory: Breed "speed to speed" and "distance to distance".
Stay away from the
"professional graders" who claim they can pick out champion breeders / flyers
from certain physical characteristics. There is no human on this earth,
regardless of what he believes or says, who can select champions by physical
appearance. Those who profess this ability as a "professional grader" have
done more harm than good to our sport. It is nothing more than fraud on their
part and foolishness on the fancier's part for listening and following such
bad advice. I have been very
fortunate in my life to be successfully involved in various competitive
sports. HUMAN AND ANIMAL. Only in the pigeon sport have I ever heard of
evaluating athletes by "EYE SIGN". Only in the pigeon sport do these experts
exist (self proclaimed experts). WHY?, because we in the sport look for any
short cut to success. There is none. The only way to be successful in this
sport is the old fashioned way, to work for it and earn it. I agree that eyes
are important, not the eyes of the bird, the eyes of the buyer. The pigeon
only needs to see to find his way home. The buyer must look and study the
bird's pedigree and ancestors to determine if the bird's background is
suitable for the style of racing in his country I believe in the
simple principle of genetics. HEREDITY IS HANDED DOWN FROM ONE GENERATION TO
THE NEXT. LIKES BREED LIKES. Intelligence, compass, homing instinct,
navigation skills, determination, courage and heart are inherited from the
birds pedigree or Ancestors' Bloodlines. Always go to the
original fancier or source for your birds. The fancier has his reputation,
honesty, integrity and his birds' good name at risk. Usually, he will give
you a better selection and a better deal. Keep all birds on a
regular schedule and routine. There is no substitute for eating, sleeping and
training at the same time each day. Put your loft activities on a regular
schedule, you will notice an improvement in the health and fitness of your
birds within a short period of time. When loft flying or road training, birds
should fly - land - trap - peanuts. Successful trainers
educate their young birds by obtaining a shipping crate identical to the one
used by the club. They prepare the birds for what to expect on shipping
night. This is a big advantage for the young birds to know where to look for
food and water. Take no chances that the birds will find it on their own.
When you look for
locations to release your birds, always try to find large land marks that the
birds can remember and see at great distances. After you reach the 40 mile
toss location or the water, whichever comes first, all training tosses are
single bird tosses.
Single tossing creates
and teaches mental maturity and intelligence. Many times the trainer overlooks
this point. Outwardly many pigeons look good (physically), but it is what is
inside that counts on race day (intelligence, confidence and independent
thinking to lead, not follow the other birds). It is important to recognize
that a racing pigeon must and does navigate and think for itself independently,
and not be a follower. Single tossing helps to educate the bird and build its
confidence to fly alone. Too many long, hard
training tosses become confusing to young birds. They return home, only to have
the fancier place them in the basket again and take them away. They spend more
time in the basket than their own loft. They need the comfort and security of
the loft and their perches to have motivation and affection for the loft and
owner. This is why I suggest more loft flying and shorter tosses instead of
many long tosses. The week between races
the birds should receive plenty of rest in the loft: A warm bath with epsom
salts the first nice day after the race, Loft fly once a day, Light training
20-30 miles in the middle of the week. Loft fly during the last days before
shipping the next race. Keep the loft quiet and let the birds rest for the next
race. Do not over train the birds between races. The birds need time to
recover physically and mentally between races. WITH QUESTIONS &
COMMENTS PLEASE CONTACT: BOB
PRISCO | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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