Training Pigeons

When Training Pigeons you need to know one thing what is going to drive the Pigeons to

come back home to there race loft? Well there is a few ways you can drive them to come

home. The first is drive them home for food when giving the food have the Pigeons on the verge

 of starvation the second is drive them home to breed at the end of a race season.

 These are the best ones to do because they have the most power to drive the Pigeons home.

 

When looking for a good race Pigeon you have to look at loads of things like the wing,

eye sign, how muscular the birds are, how purple the under side of the Pigeon is, how

close the vent is to the body and what type of body it has.

 

(EYE SIGN)

 

Eye Sign: When looking at eye sign you have to look at how dense the eye is and

how mountainous the eye is. You also have to look at the pupil if the pupil is very

dilated in every lite it means that the Pigeon may have vision difficulties. The lay out

of the Pigeon's eye is first the pupil then the circle of correlation then the iris and the

outer circle.

 

(PIGEON WING)

Pigeon Wing: The Pigeon wing consists of three main jumps in the flights the end

three flights on a pigeon should be curved down this is called the butter knife effect

and the very last one should be the thinnest of them all to have a really good wing.

There are different types of wings there are ones that are blue checkered and ones that

have white flits and black checkers.

 

(RACING PIGEON)

Racing Pigeon: There are different shaped pigeons depending on the weather

conditions of a race a smaller bodied Pigeon is good when going into wind and

bigger for a tail breeze. If the Pigeon is very muscular it is also a very good Pigeon

for going into the wind. Wile you are checking how muscular the Pigeon is check how

purple it's under side is that means it is fit to. And how close the vent is to the body

if it is close to the body that means that the pigeon is good for going into the wind.

Pigeon Front Page

Feeding Pigeons

Pigeon Diseases