TOMMY
BAKER & SON
of
Ruabon
1st
& 6th Chester Two-Bird Sartilly Yearling Race
by
Cameron Stansfield
Regular
readers of J. R.'s notes in the British Homing World will know that
this year's Chester 2B Sartilly winners, Mr & Mrs T. Baker &
Son, are one of Wrexham Federation's foremost pigeon partnerships. Suffice
to say, Tommy and son Rich are past winners of four 1st Opens in the
Welsh South Road National, from Dover, Falaise twice and Guernsey, and
on the same day they won the Chester 2B they also topped the Section
from Nantes in the WSRNFC. They never send more than five or six to
a National and their four National wins have come from a total send
of 17 pigeons.

Tommy
The
2004 season could have seen them struggling because over the preceding
winter they had decided to retire the bulk of their best racers to stock,
which left them starting the season with a team made up mostly of yearlings,
36 in fact, and just eight older birds. With the future very much in
mind, they gave these yearlings three Channel races each and 26 of them
came through the test. These birds will be set up for specific races
with confidence in 2005.
In
2004 they raced roundabout for the first time. Prior to that they had
raced around about 20 - 24 widowhood cocks and half a dozen hens. They
noted that pro rata the hens were taking just as many prizes even though
they weren't being given the same attention, so they have upped their
hen quota. They believe the key factors are health, condition and motivation,
and stress that you won't win if you don't know how to motivate pigeons.
The Chester 2B winner is a classic example. As a youngster she had five
inland races and then won the Gobowen 2B from Picauville by 146ypm...sitting
nine-day eggs at basketing. Though on roundabout as a yearling, she
was re-paired for the Chester 2B and sent sitting nine-day eggs and
again she had had five inland races. How many fanciers would simply
have left her on roundabout? Incidentally, when re-paired she was the
only hen in the section with her mate and all the other spare cocks.
She is a Huybregts, a gift from Darren Roberts of Wrexham. Just before
basketing for the Chester 2B the partners took three birds training.
They let their winning hen go first and she promptly landed in a tree,
where she sat until they let the other two birds out. Tommy says that
had they taken only the one hen, they would have been so concerned by
her behaviour, they would not have sent her to the 2B. They surmise
that she must have been scared by a peregrine on a previous flight.
By the way, the hen who topped the Section from Nantes on the same day
was still on roundabout.
They
are always trying fresh pigeons but they never buy unseen - they have
made that mistake. They prefer small-to-medium birds, apple bodied with
plenty of front - like a wedge - and above all, birds with constitution,
but they say they have won with different types of pigeon. They note
that the pectorals on the Van Reets in particular are pronounced.
They
think they have about eight birds they could call top breeders at present
in the stock loft, plus children off them. Two of their main breeders
are a nest pair of Mardon Van Reets; the hen has bred multiple 1st prizewinners
and the cock 18 x 1st prizewinners. Tommy asserts that the mainstay
of any loft are good hens and if you haven't got them you are in deep
trouble.
Tommy
says rest is sometimes better than training but knowing when to do what
is down to being a good fancier. He says if you sent to the first four
or five races and they did well, but from the next race they returned
looking tired, then if trained again they wouldn't win the following
Saturday. It's common sense, in other words. They very rarely train
old birds after the first race and they very rarely train beyond 20
miles, old or young. As he says, if racing was all about training, the
man with the most time and plenty of petrol would do all the winning.
The partners say their birds fly fantastically well at home and that
this is down to being in condition, not through habit. They also think
that widowhood cocks are best in spring and early summer, then they
can go off the boil. To counteract this they have three sections and
they stagger the work these have so that they remain competitive all
season. The second section gets going a month after the first section;
the third section is for the Channel birds and these go perhaps every
other week and might have no tosses whatsoever.
They
say that pigeons which make the transition from winning in the Club
and Fed to winning in the Nationals are about 5%. They are always looking
for that pigeon which comes straight and on its own, not flock pigeons.
Rich said that on winning the Gobowen 2B in 2003 he felt more excited
than when winning 10 x 1sts Club added together.
Rich's
ambition is to do well from Nantes, Saintes, Niort and Pau; Tommy just
likes on-the-day racing, whatever the distance. They say the pigeons
they have at present are capable of winning up to 520 miles on the day
but beyond that they don't know because they haven't sent them. Tommy
says a good fancier is one who wins inland and Channel. They think pigeons
are now faster because of feed and health, not because pigeons themselves
are faster, and they say it is harder to win today than ever. Incidentally,
when I asked Tommy whether he still got the same buzz out of racing
as ever, he replied that he even gets excited when he sees a batch of
trainers going over!
In
2004 the birds were paired on January 28th and reared a pair of youngsters.
The cocks finished off the young birds then after a fortnight they put
the hens back with the cocks. When the oldest egg was eight days old,
they then removed all hens whether they had laid or not. This brought
them to 10 - 14 days before the first race, during which time they were
trained every day, weather permitting, from eight miles. They didn't
go further because at that time of the year it was too cold.
They
say the most important time to observe pigeons is in that first hour
after they return from a race; this is when they pick their poolers
for the following week, going for the ones that look tightest and freshest,
what they call 'no-trouble pigeons'. They are generally intolerant of
sick pigeons and if they think it necessary they will remove the sick
pigeon and the whole line related to it. Tommy says he can go to anyone's
loft and tell within seconds if the birds are not quite right.

The
young bird section
The
partners basically believe in pairing good to good and they say when
you lose your winning size you've had it so if you cross a good big
pigeon and the offspring go smaller you are on the wrong track and likewise,
if you cross a good small pigeon and the outcome is bigger pigeons,
you are in trouble again. When crossing, therefore, try to make sure
the offsrping are to the size of the winning parents.
Youngsters
go to every race down to the coast and a few go across the water, with
the second Channel race with the WSRNFC being where they expect to do
well. Incidentally, in 2003 they started with 52 youngsters and 50 flew
the inland programme. All youngsters are treated exactly the same, regardless
of parentage. They enter young birds in every race but although they
always set out to win, they say they would rather have pigeons come
to win and not trap but be well fed than win with pigeons that had been
kept short. Their eyes are always on the future. They have been flying
darkness since 1996.
The
birds have only grit and minerals when rearing. On the corn they use
cod-liver oil - just enough oil to glaze the corn - and Provit once
a week and Tommy is a big believer in lettuce.
The
birds are fed HP Economy as a base feed. Tommy queries why fanciers
have a thing about not giving maize to youngsters when, by the same
token, they feed maize to their widowers to make them go faster - he
says it doesn't make sense! They like big maize because the bigger the
maize the bigger the kernel and it's only the kernel that's any good.
Popcorn maize, they believe, pleases the fancier, not the pigeon, and
they steer clear.
Once
the old birds have finished racing, Rich & Tommy don't clean out,
preferring to leave the birds well alone. The birds don't go out much
in early winter and in December would fly perhaps 20 minutes if let
out but by January they will be flying for an hour. During the season,
after they have done their hour plus, they leave the doors open for
10 minutes. Cocks and hens on roundabout exercise only once a day.
To
describe form in a hen, Tommy said: 'Picture a hen sitting. Her eye
seems to go massive and though her head doesn't turn and her eye doesn't
move, she follows you round the kit.' Also they want to see their birds
eating fast to show they are well - 'fast beaks' they call it - and
they liken it to the sound of a pneumatic drill.
Tommy
firmly believes that good pigeons are born. He says you can give a good
pigeon just barley and another pigeon the best of everything, and the
good pigeon will still beat it. He and his wife and son would like to
thank Tony & Ann Mardon and Curtis, Wall, Lunt & Green for the
good birds and wish to say that the people they admire most are their
hard-working fellow club members who keep at it week in, week out.
Finally,
Tommy has a motto: 'If you want to keep 'em, try to lose 'em. If you
want to lose 'em, try to keep 'em!'