On training pigeons, from “Loft
Manager and Pigeons,” Racing Pigeon Digest, July 2019:
“With the young pigeons it is
exactly the same as with the old pigeons.
They like to train, listen well and eat as if their lives depend on it.”
Pigeon in Rome
Photo by D. Truong
Elizabeth Macalaster contributed this link to Frank Hauck’s Operations Manual. Macalaster is working on A Call to Duty, a book about the American World War II pigeons.
https://frankhauck.blogspot.com/
Poem from The Pigeons That Went to War by Gordon H. Hayes
Far Up Front
The American Pigeon, brave
and bright
Awaits the signal for another
flight
To carry a message for the
commander’s sight.
The whir and whistle of the
flying shell
Envelops the platoon in a
fiery hell.
The prospect fierce, the
strain intense-
A pigeon released to call for
defense.
The message delivered
It zooms skyward
For instinct sure and
valiance known,
Back to its loft it speeds
alone.
The roar of battle, the
mortar mid-air
Would slow it not nor cause
despair
The hawkish shrapnel claims
its prey-
Another war pigeon aft a
hapless fray.
Some are fortunate, others
are not,
While many live, many may not.
Struck in the heart the
pigeon bled
It faltered not, nor its
courage fled-
Desperate and struggling to
reach its goal
To deliver the SOS of many a
soul
Hands went quick and minds
click,
Instantly the action went
thick
Out went support, the
situation won,
The weary soldiers thanked a
pigeon.
The even sun sank westward
ho;
The course of battle to and
fro;
Another death has stirred the
scroll-
A pigeon was etched on the
honor roll.
Sgt. Edward E. Reicher
Florence, Italy
May 23, 1944
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