A New Home for a 'Homer'
Animal Stories from All-Creatures.org
FROM
Michele Nash, Palomacy
Pigeon and Dove Adoptions
October 2017
Homing pigeons bond strongly and mate for life. So strong is their
reproductive drive and their desire to get back to their mates that they
are, in fact, seen as a symbol of fidelity, love and home. This propensity
for bonding has been exploited to the point of creating a sport that is
global in scope and can be extremely lucrative for breeders of some of the
world’s most acclaimed racing birds. One very successful method for training
homing pigeons for lives as racers is referred to as “widowhood”. Once a
homing pigeon has been mated and produced offspring, these birds are allowed
access to their mates and their babies only upon returning from their race.
This creates the sense of urgency needed to cultivate a winner.
Reprinted from
The
Official NEEWSletter of Foster Parrots & The New England Exotic Wildlife
Sanctuary

Kahuna
Sometimes animals enter our lives quite unplanned, and most often after
they have already endured their own inauspicious and circuitous path before
coming under our care. If someone had told me I’d be spending three solid
days and two hundred dollars renovating a shed to build a large aviary for a
pigeon I’d have said they were crazy. But when Kahuna arrived at the New
England Exotic Wildlife Sanctuary, he, as they say, had me at “Coo”.
Apparently still quite young, he had been found on a street in Providence.
Under the care of the NEEWS he was vetted and de-loused. Within just a few
weeks he had increased impressively in size and was utterly handsome! But
without other pigeons of his variety at the sanctuary he was without
community. After months of making excuses why I should not take in the lone
bird with no friends and a feisty attitude, I brought him home from the
sanctuary.

Kahuna
Kahuna is a homing pigeon, or a ‘Homer’ in pigeon racing parlance. His band
could be traced to a pigeon club in Massachusetts, but we have found that
breeders generally do not welcome the return of pigeons who fail to fly
home. Not willing to invest resources or support the genetics of pigeons
regarded as “damaged goods”, some pigeon breeders will euthanize these
undesirable birds.
Homing pigeons bond strongly and mate for life. So strong is their
reproductive drive and their desire to get back to their mates that they
are, in fact, seen as a symbol of fidelity, love and home. This propensity
for bonding has been exploited to the point of creating a sport that is
global in scope and can be extremely lucrative for breeders of some of the
world’s most acclaimed racing birds. One very successful method for training
homing pigeons for lives as racers is referred to as “widowhood”. Once a
homing pigeon has been mated and produced offspring, these birds are allowed
access to their mates and their babies only upon returning from their race.
This creates the sense of urgency needed to cultivate a winner. Some racing
pigeons are simply shown their mates in the presence of another bird within
their nest box before being taken away to race and the lasting image of that
drives them to fly faster to deal with the interloper when they get back
home.
While methods like these create “money-makers” for hobbiests, it’s yet
another example of human use of animals for utilitarian purposes without
consideration for the impact on the animal. Pigeons bond for life and
sometimes do form lifelong bonds even with same-sex partners, suggesting
that bonding is rooted in emotional attachment, not just reproduction. And
of course, we cannot ignore the risks to the lives and safety of the birds.
Predation is a constant threat, and factors like weather systems, accidents,
hunger, dehydration and exhaustion result in the untold numbers of injured
and lost pigeons that fill humane shelters from coast to coast every year.
Pigeons are not widely regarded as “companion animals”, but the fact is that
these birds can make wonderful pets. They are intelligent, affectionate and
interactive. Their soft coos are infinitely more pleasant to listen to then
the calls of the average parrot! Most of all, the need for homes for these
birds is enormous. Pigeons bred for racing or for dramatic releases at
events like weddings do not have the ability to survive in the wild without
assistance from people to provide food, shelter and protection from
predators. They are not “wild animals”.

Happy new pigeon home
Kahuna happily came home with me and together (with maybe a teeny bit of
help from my husband) we converted our shed into a very impressive pigeon
coop. Kahuna was instantly at home, but he was still lonely. This led me to
the MSPCA in Boston where “Pudge” had been waiting almost 3 months for
adoption. Upon first seeing her in her cage at the shelter I was dumbstruck.
The picture online did not properly convey her size at all. She was
enormous, at least twice the size of Kahuna. And she was beautiful! Pure
white and sleek as a sea otter with a cranium shaped like a beluga whale,
she sat there placidly and royally, as if waiting for her prince to arrive.
Pudge is a King Pigeon, I soon learned, and according to veteran pigeon
rescuer Elizabeth Young from Palomacy Pigeon & Dove Rescue in San Francisco,
CA., these impressive birds are the “masters of the leisure arts”, a large
docile breed known to produce the young squab seen on many restaurant menus.
Like Kahuna, Pudge had no ability to survive in the wild. Had she not been
found and brought to the MSPCA she would have perished.
I arrived home with Pudge, and since it was approaching dusk, I thought I
would allow just a brief introduction through the bars of her carrier and
take her inside with me for the night. This was not to be. From first sight,
Kahuna stopped doing his perpetual figure 8’s and constant cooing and
stared, and stared, with what looked like awe. I let Pudge out of her
carrier and she lifted off, albeit like a Flying Fortress heavy bomber,
whereby she alighted immediately on a roost in the outdoor aviary- Kahuna
following fast like a nimble and quick F-18 in comparison. A few chortles
later by Kahuna, and they were enjoying seed on the ground together. Within
just a couple days they were inseparable, happily lazing about, engaging in
friendly beak wrestling and canoodling in the basket that Kahuna had claimed
as their nest. The rescue of one lucky pigeon had resulted in the rescue of
two, and also the beginning of my advocacy for these remarkably intelligent
and social birds.
Pudge and Kahuna
Michele Nash: After exiting stage left from the workaday world over a
year ago, I have suddenly found myself with that very precious
commodity...TIME. I am now happily able to devote myself to the causes that
had tugged at my heart strings for years. The more involved I’ve become
caring for different species, as well as our own, the more I’ve realized
that loneliness, and thus neglect, is a pervasive condition shared amongst
all. It is this condition which inspires me every day to get out the door
and spend as much time as I can to alleviate it for as many as I can come in
contact with. I’ve never been happier, the rewards have never been greater,
and the people and animals I’ve met never more inspirational.
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