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Keith
Mott
Writes
about winning fanciers past and present
The
Champions of Yesteryear - Part 12
ALEC & MOLLY MARTIN
of Worplesdon

I
first met Alec & Molly Martin in the early 1970s being drawn by their
fantastic performances in the National Flying Club and SMT Combine which
I covered in the fancy press. A 20-mile drive to Worplesdon, near Guildford
in Surrey took me to the outstanding lofts of Alec & Molly Martin.
Alec was nick named ' Mons ' Martin and his loft 'Little Belgium' as Alec
was a student of the Belgian families and the lofts housed the Belgian
strains of Pol Bostyn, Denys Brothers, Descamps Van Hasten, Janssen of
Arendonk and Fabry. I asked Alec why he preferred the Belgian pigeons
and his answer was that he believed the best criterion when buying stock
is pedigree with a family history of winning pigeons. Where else do we
find so many crack lofts that make a habit of winning national and international
races? Most of the Belgian champions are raced on after national events
and prove they are not flukes, but most English national winners never
see the light of day after they win. Alec maintained the main factor is
birds bred from winners paired to winners. The racing records of these
great Belgian champions show they are not just one-off performances, the
list is endless. He said look at the racing records of Benohi (Bostyn),
Bliksem (Denys Bros), Prins (Denys Bras) and Motta (Van Hee) to name a
few, whose racing careers were long and strong, being second to none in
the world for quality. Alec said there had been a marked take over with
Belgian pigeons in this country in the early 1970s. Look at the Busschaert
pigeons in the sprint events and the Cattrysse NFC winners in the early
1970s. Many of the top fanciers in England today owe their success to
the Continental breeders. Alec always said if you can't beat them, join
them, which seems to be very good advice. Everyone is trying to breed
that champion and Alec took what he hoped to be a short cut with the best
of the Belgian pigeons.

The
Martin's loft record in short and long distance race since the 1970s and
1980s was second to none and must have rated as one of the top south of
England lofts, scoring premier positions in the federation, combine and
national every season. The partners had been premier prize winners on
numerous occasions in the Godalming DFC, which was the strongest club
in the Southern Region, with a membership of 70 and every position was
hard earned with a club radius of 10 miles. Alec and Molly had many great
seasons but 1979 was a bumper year recording many 1sts with the highlights
being 2nd open SMT Combine Le Mans (smash), 42nd open SMT Combine Angers,
5th open SMT Combine Niort, 23rd open SMT Combine Bergerac, 6th open SMT
Combine Plymouth (young birds), 1st Surrey Federation Exeter, 1st Surrey
Federation Weymouth (young birds), lifting 10 cups and trophies including
the Surrey Federation Continental Average, SMT Combine Continental Average
and the SMT Combine Old Bird and Young Bird Combine Average. One of the
principal pigeons in lifting the Federation and Combine Averages was the
Fabry blue cock 'Radar' and he recorded 2nd open SMT Combine (3,011 birds)
from the Le Mans smash. In the early part of the season he was on widowhood
and Alec named him 'Radar' because he homed in thick mist from Le Mans
. The Martin's 5th open SMT Combine winner from Niort was The Warren x
Medway blue cock 'Rising Star'. The pigeon to tie up the averages was
the Young Janssen x Fabry red cock 'Milo' and he was 6th open SMT Combine(2,451
birds) Plymouth. This little cock was a grandson of Alec's ace Janssen
stock cock 'Chief', which bred many good pigeons for the Martins 'Chief'
was purchased from Roger Timmermans of Strombeek, Belgium and was a grandson
of Oude Vos and the world-famous Merckx, both of Janssen Brothers of Arendonk.
Another golden year for the Martins was 1975 when they won 1st club, 1st
Surrey Federation, 3 rd . open SMT Combine Bergerac, 1st club, 2nd Surrey
Federation, 15th open SMT Combine Avranches, 2nd club, 3rd Surrey Federation,
9th open SMT Combine Niort, 16th Section E, 55th open Pau(NFC). As well
as many other 1sts, they lifted the Surrey Federation Old Bird Average
Cup, Surrey Federation Channel Average Cup, Surrey Federation Longest
Old Bird Race Shield, 55thopen Pau NFC and 3rd open SMT Combine Bergerac
was recorded on the same day. A brilliant performance!

The
Martin's first birds were obtained from Stan Edgington and Ron & Chris
Cox of Godalming
in 1959. The Belgian families in the loft were obtained at considerable
trouble and expense and as the records show, bred birds to race and win
federation and combines from 70 to 500 miles. Alec always told novices
to buy stock from one of the successful one-family specialists, seek his
advice and stick to that one strain. One of Alec's all time best pigeons
was the old pencil blue cock 77 and he was off the Martin's old original
family. This nice cock recorded 1st Hersham open Weymouth,60ypm in front
of the next loft on the result sheet(the Martins recorded 1st, 2nd and
3rd open),209th open Avranches Young Bird National, and flew Pau 4 times,
3 times on the winning day. His sire was Alec's The Nantes Cock, which
scored 4years in succession from Nantes including 6 th . Section E, 36
th . open Nantes NFC. Another favourite at the Martin's loft was the Fabry
blue pied cock 'White Nose', which won several out standing club 1sts
against 500 birds. He had many top federation positions and scored in
the 1979 Nantes National.

The
main racing loft was 18ft x 7ft with 3 compartments, one for young birds,
2 for old birds, with a corridor running the length of the loft. The birds
were trapped through bob wires. and there was always food before them
because the Martins didn't believe in keeping the birds short of corn.
All the birds in the main racing loft were raced on the natural system.
His stock birds were housed in a nice 16ft x 6ft loft with a flight and
half this loft housed 6 pairs of widowhood pigeons. Molly cleaned and
dressed the loft with lime every day and also changed the water twice
a day. Molly Martin was a natural with pigeons, one of the best lady fanciers
I have ever met! The birds were fed on a good sound mixture with extra
maize being added just before Pau and Bergerac and they were given condition
seed. Alec was the director in an engineering firm and had a fair bit
of freedom for training, which he gave regularly at about 15 miles. He
said he has given birds long training tosses but they seem to perform
better with lots of short training tosses. The stock birds were paired
up on February 14th and the racers in March. About 60youngsters were bred
every year as Alec thought the more youngsters bred, the better his chance
of breeding a champion. He said that 2 of the main factors in success
with pigeons is'1 00% dedication12 months a year and go for the strongest
competition. Alec wasn't eyesign miJ1dedand said if he thought it was
important he would study it and only keep one pair with the breeder's
eyesign and a few feeders to rear all the winners. Molly was a great work
force generally, managing and cleaning the birds and lofts. She clocked
the first arrivals and paired up the race team. Alec maintained his most
thrilling experience in the sport was in 1964, when he sent 2 birds for
his first crack at the Pau National and recorded 160th open with very
few home locally on the winning day.
The
Martins won the Surrey Federation twice inland in 1979, one was an old
bird and the other a young bird. The old bird was a Fabry dark cheq cock
called 'Monty' and he recorded 1st club, 1 st Surrey Federation, 2,611
birds Exeter . The youngster, 'Well Away', a Janssen cross blue cock,
won the very strong Godalming Club by a very large margin and recorded
1st club, 1st Surrey Fed, 2,153 birds Weymouth. Alec lives in a hot-bed
of great fanciers and said he has respect for a lot of them. In .the 1970s
he thought Cyril Medway of Southampton was a great fancier, because of
the size of the Medway team and the outstanding success he enjoyed. Alec
liked the idea of the thing Louis Massarella is doing and says it's a
good bet for the beginner to purchase birds from him because he offers
good stock at fair prices. Alec said local small clubs should Amalgamate,
centralise their HQ, thus cutting expenses and providing better competition.
Alec
and Molly are no longer with us and were brilliant pigeon racing team.
That's it for this week! I can be contacted on Telephone: 01372 463480.
See yer!
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