"The following was prepared by Mr Turley in reply to questions from myself asking for information on training my Racing Homers and the notes retain his copyright."
From: Leo Turley
The care for racing pigeons is very much the same as for any
other pigeons. If you breed youngsters from the race birds you received,
they need to be shown the outside at about 5 weeks of age before they are
strong enough to take to the air and perhaps get lost because they don't
know the surroundings. You need to have some type of open carry box to sit
them in a few feet away from the loft to look back and recognise when they
are free to try their wings. The old birds you receive to start with will quite likely go back to where they came from, depending on how far away they came from, but this is not absolute. Sometimes, if you provide a nice comfortable place to live and you are able to release them carefully, breaking them into your loft is possible. You need to pick the time carefully. Let them have one round of youngsters and then later,
possibly at some stage during the next nest release just one and see what
happens. The best time for cocks is when they are driving the hen for the
next nest, but you need to be careful because at this time also they may be
feeding youngsters and the cock can feed without the hen, but often the hen
will not feed without the cock. The best time to release the hen is a few
days after she has laid her eggs. If the birds live close enough from where
they originally came from, a few test runs will not hurt too much to try.
If you are successful, all well and good, they will still remember their old
home and may later visit it, especially between nests, but depending how
well you look after them in your own loft - most of them are not stupid -
they can see a good thing and usually stay. Training of young pigeons
happens in stages. Firstly you need to put them out inside the basket as
mentioned for a day or so and then after say 3 days, open the lid and let
them hop out and return to the loft themselves. Once they do this you need
to just let them out each day so they can learn to fly, which will be about
3 weeks. After that they need to learn their surroundings well and the
first training flight for them (not knowing how much territory they have
covered themselves)in about 3 months would be half a kilometre (1/4 mile)
and keep extending the distance for the first 4 or 5 flights by this much
until they have properly learned the drill. After that you should be able
to take them a few miles away any time you want. There is a lot more than
this in pigeon training and racing and takes experience and you would do
well observing any local racing fancier on his feed and training methods.
Check out my website at
http://www.nw.com.au/~lturley/Coralbay1.htm
http://www.nw.com.au/~lturley/STEWARDS.HTM
http://www.nw.com.au/~lturley/Marshall1.htm
http://www.nw.com.au/~lturley/lives.htm
http://www.nw.com.au/~lturley/Code.htm
http://www.nw.com.au/~lturley/health.htm
There is also much more on the site if you want to follow it through.
See:
http://www.nw.com.au/~lturley/Shanregal.htm my Grandson Kurt, son of my
second daughter is also a pigeon fancier see
http://www.nw.com.au/~lturley/kurt1.htm and his new loft we built see
http://www.nw.com.au/~lturley/kurtloft.htm so you can see I am a lucky person.