Racing Pigeon Training
Racing pigeons are housed together in a specially designed dovecote or loft.
From about four weeks of age until the end of its racing career, the
racing loft is the pigeon's home and is where it returns to on race day.
After 22 to 28 days in the nest (depending on the owner's
preference) the young birds are removed and placed in a section of a
large loft or in a smaller loft built for the purpose. After a few days
of learning how to locate the water and eating by themselves they are
allowed to wander out of the loft and peck around in the garden, while
doing this they are constantly observing their surroundings and becoming
familiar with them. At about age six to seven weeks the birds will
begin taking off, flying in very small circles around their loft and
owner's house. As their confidence grows they gradually wander farther
and farther from home until they are out of sight and can remain so for
as much as two hours before returning. When a few trainers fly their
pigeons in the same area, these flying "batches" (as flocks of pigeons
are called) can number in the thousands. It does not, however, help them
much in relation to finding their home from long distances away, a
fundamental of pigeon racing. As confident flyers, the young pigeons are
taken on progressively longer 'training tosses', driven a distance away
from their home and released. This method of training is a way to
condition the birds mentally and physically to prepare them for the
races. This practice of loft flying and tossing continues throughout a
pigeon's career to keep their homing instincts sharp.
There are many ways to train racing pigeons. Like every sport out
there, racing pigeons is an evolving sport. One of the most popular
systems is widowhood. This system uses the birds' desire to reproduce as
motivation to try to give the bird a sense of urgency on race day. The
use of widowhood is usually begun by first allowing the racer to raise a
baby in their nest box. After the baby is weaned the hen is removed and
often the nestbox is closed off, from then on the only time these birds are allowed to see their mate
or enter the nest box is upon returning from training or a race. This
conditioning is one of the key elements in a lot of racing programs.
Due to advancements in technology researchers have been able to use small Global Positioning Systems
to track the flight paths that their birds follow. Small GPS systems
have recently begun to hit the consumer market. Companies like
PigeonTrack and GEM Supplements currently sell GPS units for novice to
advanced race trainers to use to gather data.
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