|
|
|
Keith
Mott
Writes
about winning fanciers past and present
The
Champions of Yesteryear - Part 10
JED & JOAN JACKSON
of Worthing

When I look back
over the many years of wonderful performances put up by National winners
from Pau, Jed and Joan Jackson's win 1980 must rate as one of
the most remarkable. The race was hard enough to win by a sighted person,
but for a blind fancier to win, it was fantastic. Although the great Jed
Jackson is famous for being 'the blind man who won the Pau National',
his great racing performances go much further back than that, as he's
won cups and averages in the Club and Federation for many years. His wonderful
wife, Joan, is a great worker for his pigeons, doing bookwork, training
and general loft management with Jed. I have been in the Jackson's garden
on race day and it's brilliant watching Jed clocking in his own pigeons.
Once the bird has trapped, Joan calls out the nest box number that the
racer has entered and Jed goes straight to it and clocks in, with no time
wasted.

Jed's Pau National
winner was his natural blue chequer hen, Champion 'Genista'. She was bred
in 1978 from a blue cock obtained from John Langstone of the West
Midlands and the National at her first time at Pau , with 5,884 birds
competing. John Langstone was a great fancier, winning 1 st . open N.F.C.
Pau and 1 st . open N.F.C. Nantes, and presented the famous, 'Langstone
Gold Cup', to the National Flying Club. The sire of 'Genista' was a blue
chequer down from Jed's old long distance family. Champion 'Genista' died
in 1982, being buried under the Genista tree next to the loft and Jed
maintains that she died from the effort of winning the Pau National for
him. A wonderful pigeon! Many present day winners are bred down from her
including Jed's good blue hen, which spent most of her time on his shoulder,
talking in his ear, as 'Genista' used to. She was a granddaughter of the
Pau National winner. This loverly blue hen arrived home from Thurso (550
miles) at 07.00hrs, landed on Jed's shoulder and he clocked her to win
the race. Jed races both North and South Road , with the same pigeons
and an interesting fact is that 'Genista' flew Berwick five weeks before
she won the Pau National.
His famous self built loft is 12ft.x
6ft, having two sections and open window trapping. Jed says that when
he built his loft, being blind, he would worked after nightfall and worked
so late he lost the goodwill of his neighbours! In recent years his wonderful
old loft front has shown some wood rot and has been recently rebuilt by
some friends. The loft has nice big landing boards and is scraped out
every day, with no litter used on the floor. Jed only races natural and
says useful pigeon racing does not start until the birds go over the 250
miles stage. He keeps no more than 14 pairs of old birds and he knows
every bird by handling them. He says his fingertips are his sight and
knows when a stray bird is in the loft.
The birds are fed
on farm beans, peas and maize. Jed breeds 24 youngsters each season and
these are raced to the perch. He pairs up in March, with the long distance
Nationals in mind, and likes his old birds to race through to 500 miles,
North and South Road . The Jackson 's had a good blue cock, a few
seasons ago, and he raced and scored from 500 miles north and south several
times. A brilliant pigeon! He says winning the Pau National was wonderful,
but his best memory in pigeons was when he was a young lad in the north-east
of England and he had pigeons in four nest boxes in the coalhouse. He
says in those days he was ankle deep in coal dust, when he won the Pau
National he was ankle deep in stardust. A wonderful fancier!
Our Jed is 90 years of age in early
2006 and is still racing his pigeons from the long distance with the National.
In fact he clocked on the day of liberation from the N.F.C. Tarbes race
in 2005. Brilliant stuff! I can be contacted on Telephone: 01372 463480.
See yer!
|
|