I have a family of white grizzles that fly extremely well as young birds but more often than not go down as old birds and I am convinced they get picked off by bop because they are white.
I'm not saying this is the reason they go down but it could be and I have had more of them come back injured than I have any other colour.
I dont breed for colour but I think this family has the potential to do well as other colours that have come out of them have done but most years I am left without any of the whites.
In my work as an antiques restorer I do a lot of french polishing and can suspend lots of different pigments in a liquid form to match most of the pigeon colours.
I have done a few experiment on moulted flights and stock birds and dont think it harms the flights or the quill and am confident that I can change the colour of any pigeon but wondered what everyones thoughts are....
so would welcome any comments.....
"Dyeing" white pigeons.
If it's BOP why aren't they getting hit as YBs? You don't say what % the whites are in your team? If they are the majority of your birds the odds would increase that they would be the ones hit by BOP.Diamond Dave wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 1:25 pm I have a family of white grizzles that fly extremely well as young birds but more often than not go down as old birds and I am convinced they get picked off by bop because they are white.
I'm not saying this is the reason they go down but it could be and I have had more of them come back injured than I have any other colour.
I dont breed for colour but I think this family has the potential to do well as other colours that have come out of them have done but most years I am left without any of the whites.
In my work as an antiques restorer I do a lot of french polishing and can suspend lots of different pigments in a liquid form to match most of the pigeon colours.
I have done a few experiment on moulted flights and stock birds and dont think it harms the flights or the quill and am confident that I can change the colour of any pigeon but wondered what everyones thoughts are....
so would welcome any comments.....
My own view on changing the colour of birds, is don't do it. A birds flight should be natural and you don't want anything thing on it that stops the natural bloom forming. This changing colour is ok for fantails, or fancy pigeons, but these aren't been asked to RACE are they?
Yep, stand on it's wing while you spray paint it. I'm gonna do that.......Not.Devo1956 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 4:46 pm Used in different countries.
https://youtu.be/ieNWN2Duvn0?si=FUOz0Le4Z-awl6ew
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Blessed is he who expecteth nothing, for verily, he shall not be disappointed.
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Thanks Buster, these are natural earth pigments that are suspended in alcohol which would evaporate off very quickly. I'm reasonably confident it wouldnt affect the feathering.
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Ah, I agree with that King, I wouldnt want to stop the bloom forming but I thought the bloom came from the sjkin.... also wouldnt want to affect whatever happens with the oil gland.king wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 12:18 amIf it's BOP why aren't they getting hit as YBs? You don't say what % the whites are in your team? If they are the majority of your birds the odds would increase that they would be the ones hit by BOP.Diamond Dave wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 1:25 pm I have a family of white grizzles that fly extremely well as young birds but more often than not go down as old birds and I am convinced they get picked off by bop because they are white.
I'm not saying this is the reason they go down but it could be and I have had more of them come back injured than I have any other colour.
I dont breed for colour but I think this family has the potential to do well as other colours that have come out of them have done but most years I am left without any of the whites.
In my work as an antiques restorer I do a lot of french polishing and can suspend lots of different pigments in a liquid form to match most of the pigeon colours.
I have done a few experiment on moulted flights and stock birds and dont think it harms the flights or the quill and am confident that I can change the colour of any pigeon but wondered what everyones thoughts are....
so would welcome any comments.....
My own view on changing the colour of birds, is don't do it. A birds flight should be natural and you don't want anything thing on it that stops the natural bloom forming. This changing colour is ok for fantails, or fancy pigeons, but these aren't been asked to RACE are they?
It would only need a very weak solution of colour which I dont think will affect any of the natural functions.
My other concern would be what the bird would think if it was white and suddenly changed to a blue or black.
Your comments also got me thinking if there is a particular colour gets hit more than others and wondered if anyone has carried out a poll on the subject. Ppl used to say that reds were more vulnerable because bop sees them in the negative format.
Happy to be put right on the bloom thing mate
There is NO colour bird that is safe. I read a piece about this and it said BOP will target a single bird in a flock and only focus on that one bird. The reason many say that reds, whites are hit is simply because they stand out if in a flock of darker birds. A single blue in a flock of whites would stand out. So it's NOT a particular colour BOP attacks, but a bird which is a different colour to the rest of the flock. If a fancier has birds of all one colour they will still be hit. The piece I read said that birds with white on ie pieds, white flighted or with white rumps had the best chance of escape as the flash of white takes the BOP by surprise. That's why Wood pigeons are attacked less than feral/racing pigeons.Diamond Dave wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 8:45 amAh, I agree with that King, I wouldnt want to stop the bloom forming but I thought the bloom came from the sjkin.... also wouldnt want to affect whatever happens with the oil gland.king wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 12:18 amIf it's BOP why aren't they getting hit as YBs? You don't say what % the whites are in your team? If they are the majority of your birds the odds would increase that they would be the ones hit by BOP.Diamond Dave wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 1:25 pm I have a family of white grizzles that fly extremely well as young birds but more often than not go down as old birds and I am convinced they get picked off by bop because they are white.
I'm not saying this is the reason they go down but it could be and I have had more of them come back injured than I have any other colour.
I dont breed for colour but I think this family has the potential to do well as other colours that have come out of them have done but most years I am left without any of the whites.
In my work as an antiques restorer I do a lot of french polishing and can suspend lots of different pigments in a liquid form to match most of the pigeon colours.
I have done a few experiment on moulted flights and stock birds and dont think it harms the flights or the quill and am confident that I can change the colour of any pigeon but wondered what everyones thoughts are....
so would welcome any comments.....
My own view on changing the colour of birds, is don't do it. A birds flight should be natural and you don't want anything thing on it that stops the natural bloom forming. This changing colour is ok for fantails, or fancy pigeons, but these aren't been asked to RACE are they?
It would only need a very weak solution of colour which I dont think will affect any of the natural functions.
My other concern would be what the bird would think if it was white and suddenly changed to a blue or black.
Your comments also got me thinking if there is a particular colour gets hit more than others and wondered if anyone has carried out a poll on the subject. Ppl used to say that reds were more vulnerable because bop sees them in the negative format.
Happy to be put right on the bloom thing mate