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Keith
Mott
Writes
about winning fanciers past and present
BOB REEVES
of Exeter

This
week's "ON THE ROAD" features a very dear friend of mine, who won the
Nantes National in 1996, Bob Reeves of Exeter, He is one of the pigeon
sport's gentlemen and is not only a great pigeon racer, but is also a
pigeon lover, representing everything that is good about pigeon racing.
On my visits to Bob's little loft, the birds are always bursting with
contentment, with his small team of natural old birds popping in and out,
feeding their young and generally enjoying life. On one of my many visits
to Bob's bungalow, he had the young birds out for a fly and when he called
them down they alighted all over him, not from hunger, but from love.
Bob won the Nantes National with his two year old Warrington-Savage Barker
blue chequer hen, 'Reevo's My Peggy', named after Bob's late wife. This
game hen won the National while feeding a youngster, but was locked out
of the loft when she arrived home from Nantes, as Bob didn't expect her
home so fast and was cleaning the old bird section out. The clock and
thimbles were in the bungalow and he lost a lot of time, clocking his
National winner in his kitchen. 'Reevo's My Peggy' is medium-sized and
apple-bodied in the hand, with silky feathering and a nice tic behind
her orange eyes, which really sets her off. She has been a truly class
act, as prior to winning the Nantes National she won many top positions
including 1st Club, 4th Section, 8th Open WECA Littlehampton, in spite
of being a really bad trapper. On her build up to her National win, she
had four races, including Rennes , and her last training toss was a single
up from Torquay, 20 miles from the Exeter loft.

Bob
was born in Exeter and although his father wasn't a pigeon I fancier,
he owned some good greyhounds in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Bob first
became involved with pigeons at the age of six, when he used to watch
a school friend's father's birds train and race. The young Bob kept his
first birds in a fish box, with chicken wire over the front. One particular
fancier who gave him some special help in getting started in pigeons was
Tom Wilson, who lived just down the street from the Reeves family. Tom's
loft was situated on the old city wall, looking out over the River Exe
and beyond to the Haldon Hills, the present day Exeter liberation site.
Bob said that Tom was a grand old fancier who taught him a lot of the
basics of racing pigeons, which he has never forgotten. Bob has been a
fancier for 70 years, a part .from the war years, and the first club in
which he raced was the Western Counties RPC, which is still racing on
the north road today. He likes all sport, but his other love is boxing,
which he did competitively from the age of nine, boxing for the Exeter
Boxing Club and the Royal Navy. Bob had 421 amateur bouts and lost only
11 of them. His first loft was 3ft square and 18 Inches deep, made from
Tate & Lyle sugar boxes and nailed to the bathroom wall. He had to
get up a ladder to clean and feed the birds and once he got splinters
in his bottom when he slid down the ladder with some race rubbers, to
run to another fancier's loft to clock in! Bob's present loft is 12ft
x 6ft, with two sections, one with 12 nest boxes for natural racers and
one with 28 box perches for the young birds. His self-built loft has open
door trapping and he maintains that good ventilation, and plenty of it,
is a must for good loft design. He pairs up all his old birds on the full
moon in March, when the wild birds mate up. He says he races the natural,
system because he is an old fancier and it suits him. His birds have lots
of clean water, good com, a clean loft, and most of all, a lot of love.
During the racing season he likes to give his birds three training tosses
in the week, Tuesday 20 miles, Wednesday 40 miles and Thursday 20 miles,
as this keeps them on their toes and muscled up. His family of pigeons
is made up of the old English strains of Warrington-Savage Barker, Kirkpatrick-Savage
Barker and a few Busschaerts, and they do him proud. The Warrington-Savage
Barkers were bred down from Menzie's Lerwick hen, only bird on the day
and in race time from 671 miles. The Kirkpatrick-Savage Barkers were obtained
from his son, Allan, who raced them with outstanding success to Thurso.
Bob's best performance to date was winning the Nantes National in 1996.
He says it's a race he will never forget and only fanciers who have won
the National know the fantastic feeling you have when you are told that
you have won.

His
family is very interested in the pigeons. Indeed, they are a smashing
family. He has two sons who are both fanciers, Bob Junior who in Malta
for a number of years, and Allan, who had to give up because of the dreaded
pigeon fancier's lung, but still likes to go to see his dad's birds on
race days. Bob races in the Exeter Invitation RPC, of which he is a life
vice president, and races both north and south routes. When racing, Bob
feeds his old birds with a good mixture, as this seems to keep them in
condition longer. He gives them a trapping mixture and a lettuce twice
a week and maintains that there is plenty of iron in green food. He also
boils stinging nettles and, after straining them, puts the liquid in the
drinking water. Bob has tried a deep litter of wood shavings on the floor
of the loft, but doesn't like it. He prefers to get on his hands and knees
for a daily scrape out. When breeding, he puts the best to the best to
keep the line going until he needs a bit of new blood, hopefully from
the same strain. When selecting breeders, he goes for good type, balance
in the hand and good winning bloodlines. When, you have had pigeons for
70 years, he thinks you have a feeling that you've put the right two birds
together.
There
you have it, Bob Reeves, the NFC Nantes National winner of 1996. I can
be contacted on Telephone: 01372 463480. See yer!
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