Tatscru Loft Website Update
Today's blog will feature one of our oldest members, Alex has been doing a lot of work on his website "TATS CRU LOFT" and it certainly shows...Way To Go Alex!! Lets all let him know what a great job he has done by leaving your thoughts and comments below, I will see that he gets them so he can improve and keep great pigeon content coming our way.
Racer's Catalogue and Insider's Guide results video:
Racing Pigeon School is a twelve month/365 day per year program. Racing Pigeon School begins each year on November 1st. Here are a few of the key dates each year for Racing Pigeon School:
(These dates are approximate.)
- November 1 – all of the pigeons, especially the breeders, are medicated during the first several months of November. Breeding pairs are pre-mated during the month of November.
- December 1 – breeding couples are coupled.
- December 10 – 14 – breeding couples lay eggs.
- January 1 – First round of young birds hatch.
- January 7 – 14 – First round youngsters banded or rung.
- February 1 – First round youngsters are weaned.
- February 10 – Second round hatches.
- March 1 – First round youngsters are training around the loft.
- March 10 – Second round youngsters are weaned.
- April 15 – First round begins road training from 1 to 5 miles.
- April 10 – Second round youngsters are training around the loft.
- May 15 – Second round begins road training from 1 to 5 miles.
- June 1 – First and second rounds are combined and continue to road train up to 50 miles.
- July 1 – Primary race teams (cocks/hens) are selected and coupled with older widowhood mates. Primary race team builds nests and lays eggs. Road training continues. Selected secondary team remains in training loft.
- August 1 – Race teams’ eggs and nests are removed. Widowhood road training begins. (Race team remains celibate during the week and train home to mates on Friday or Saturday mornings depending upon weather.
- September 10 – Young Bird Race Series begins from 100 miles.
- October 31 – Young Bird Race Series ends.
- November 1 - Pigeon School begins again.
SOME MORE OF MY PIGEONS
HERE ARE SOME PICTURES OF MY NEW LOFT.THE SPLASH 08 #972
BC 2008 #976
JOHNNY NONAME 2009 #4219 MNTVIEWBERTOLUCCI #1360 AU 2008
About Alex:
Well it started when I was about 15yrs old in 1983 in The South Bronx, N.Y. I live on a 5th floor buliding and I had 8 tipplets on a window coop. As I got older I had a chance to put a coop on the roof 8'X8' with a screen size of 8'X8' holding a total of 254 print Canadian tipplets high flyers 4,5 hours on the wing on a good day they wouldn't be seen for hours on end they just fly, but then as time passed I seen a friend that had a black homer and a grizzle homer too, and they where very fast and they are smart too, He would take them to Brooklyn,N.Y on the train and release them and they would get home so I tried this with my pigeons"tipplets" took about 40 birds on a check up that is what we called training in the tipplet world in N.Y.C. Anyways to tell you I got back nothing that day but I did get some back a couple of days later but to know that the homer can make it back in a couple of mins, sometimes under an hour so they caught my attention I said to myself, Self, someday I will get a homer loft. As time passed by in my life I grew into other things getting married,work, kids, and became a grandfather too, and now I'm getting back into the sport of pigeon racing living now in Worcester,ma. It's here where i met a man by the name for Frank Pacheo whom gave me a couple of good youngsters to start me up so i can join a club. I now the opportunity and a place where I can build my 1st loft, it's not easy but a dream in progress. I've been waiting for this day for a long time since 1998, it's like a baby coming into the world. I just got lucky you can say meeting Bill Desmarias the Director of the A.U. Northeast zone whom helped me out with getting started with a good stock of breeders. Also I express my greatest condolences to the Greenhall family my heart goes out to his family and I give my blessing to the The Greenhall Family in loss of a great man Dr. Frank Greenhall, I didn't know him but I've read of him. And I've been blessed to have some of his pigeons in my loft and keep him in the sport. I like to do well and pass on the love for the sport. In 2010 it will be my 1st year in the club. looking to make a mark in the pigeon world. Lets see what happens!
Follow the link to Tats Cru Loft and explore all the wonderful pigeon racing information and content Alex has compiled on this excellent site!!
The Pigeon Insider newsletter sample:
Garlic and Racing Pigeons
Now what about the use of garlic in racing pigeons? It is a popular, widely used product, but solid, scientific information on its effects in pigeons seems to be scarce. Everything from cloves of garlic to powders, pills and oils are available in health food stores, grocery stores and by companies selling products for pigeons. Are there any real benefits, or are the “benefits” in the eye of the beholder, i.e. the fancier who uses garlic products? Little scientific information for racing pigeons seems to be readily available, but it should be possible to extrapolate information from work done in humans and laboratory animals to pigeons.
Firstly and foremostly, logic based on a number of studies, says that the best source o the good effects of garlic is fresh cloves of garlic. Manufacturing procedures in the preparation of garlic powders, liquids and oils can vary considerable, and since important, active compounds in garlic can be lost very easily when garlic is processed to produce these liquids and powders, ect,. it seems best to avoid these products as they may contain few, if any, of the useful compounds in garlic. Further, it is best to crush cloves of garlic and add them directly to drinking water for pigeons, rather than heating or boiling them, to avoid losing a number of key chemicals in the cloves. Remember that heating garlic cloves above 60� can cause the loss of odour and medicinal properties.
Secondly, garlic may provide a temporary antibiotic effect on disease-producing bacteria, fungi and yeasts, both in the digestive tract and body tissues, by reducing their numbers during the period that it is in the drinking water. Thirdly, the trace minerals selenium and germanium present in garlic may give a boost to the immune system of pigeons, to increase their ability to fight disease-producing organisms of many kinds. IN domestic livestock, selenium is known to be important in the normal development of the immune system while the animal is growing on the uterus. A deficiency of selenium and Vitamin E has a definite adverse effect, because in such deficiencies, the development of immune system is retarded. As a result, the newborn animal or bird may be completely or severely restricted from protecting itself against invading organisms of all kinds.
Fourthly, although dissolving blood clots (the cause of heart attacks and strokes in humans) or preventing their formation in the arteries of humans is important in human medicine, it is known that racing pigeons are highly resistant to the buildup of fatty substances in their arteries. In human, these fatty substances may clog blood vessels or they may induce the formation of a clot at the point where the vessel is narrowed by the fatty deposits, and result in a heart attack or stroke. In contrast to racing pigeons, some meat- producing breeds of pigeons are very susceptible to a buildup of fatty substances in their vessels. So garlic might be of benefit to meat varieties of pigeons, but as racing pigeons are highly resistant to this type of buildup, the benefit might not be so great in the blood vessels of racing pigeons.
Fifthly, garlic as a de-toxifying agent could have a role as a “blood purifier” or a “tissue purifier,” so to speak—whatever these phrases may mean, since they can and do cloak a great deal of the ignorance we all share on this subject. Both are meaningless expressions that really don’t explain anything, but they are used commonly in the mystique of pigeon racing! That aside, there are indications that chemical compounds in garlic may assist the body to de-toxify, neutralize or eliminate noxious substances. In pigeons, the use of garlic after a race may assist the so-called “depurative” diets—whatever that might mean—in restoring a bird to normal racing condition. Whether lactic acidosis is a real problem in returned racers is still debatable, in my opinion. Because, fat is unquestionably the major fuel for racing, and because the burning of fat for energy by racing birds is an aerobic process in the body, lactic acid—which results when glycogen is used as fuel in an anaerobic process—should not be produced, at least in any great amount. Braking and landing at the end of a race are very likely anaerobic processes, but the amount of lactic acid produced from such rapidly occurring events should be minuscule. In theory, it could be shown that birds actually sprint the last few miles of a race, much as a human marathon runner might sprint the last 100 yards or so, then there could be a good basis for believing that lactic aced—one of the so-called “impurities” in the blood—is produced, and that it needs to be eliminated. Lactic acid is known to be produced in human distance runners who sprint the last leg of a race. However, in most cases, usually a 20 minute “cool-down” walk will effectively “burn off” or eliminate the lactic acid from the system. It is known that pigeons that are not exercised reasonably soon after a long grueling race may develop marked swelling of the breast muscles that become hard and board-like. The birds become “tied up” and have difficulty flying from the floor to the lowest perches or nest boxes. Given this knowledge, it is possible, and indeed likely, that lactic acidosis is involved in such situations and that early workouts after a race would eliminate this problem. It is also possible that the use of crushed garlic cloves in drinking water at this time might add some extra benefit in allowing the liver and other organs to metabolize lactic acid and other compounds, and to help restore the birds to normal racing condition. Dosages of garlic for pigeons are difficult to come by, particularly since there is such variability in the amount of the key chemical alliin, which is converted to the active compound allicin, in garlic cloves.
Garlic in racing pigeons remains quite an enigma, and as fanciers, we use it without really knowing why, but our ignorance is shared by many people, including the human and veterinary medical communities, who have only tantalizing bits of information to suggest that there may be a number of positive effects from the use of garlic. Certainly, as indicated earlier in this article studies in laboratory animals and humans suggest a number of desirable effects from the use of garlic. Whether these effects apply directly to racing pigeons is just not known at this time. However, present evidence from human and laboratory animal work, and the empirical experience of many fanciers, suggest that, when used judiciously, crushed cloves of garlic, used in drinking water, may be a highly useful product in the loft throughout the year, but especially during rearing and the racing season. At present, garlic-based oils, powders and pills are likely much less useful. Possibly newer developments in extracting the active principles of garlic may get around the present problems associated with current methods. Until these problems are solved, fresh cloves of garlic from the grocery store are still the best source of the medicinal properties of garlic. I hope that this sketchy outline of the potential value of garlic, and some of its risks, may stimulate more controlled research on its value (or lack of) in racing pigeons. There is much to learn! This article merely scratches the surface.
Garlic and Racing Pigeons by Dr. A Chalmers, DVM
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Glenn West





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