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Sanitation and Disease Prevention |
Prevention |
Published: Yearbook 1986 NTU |
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Sanitation and Disease Prevention
These two subjects, sanitation
and disease prevention, are so closely allied that they must be considered
together. Sanitation is basic in disease prevention. as basic as isolation.
This chaptcr constitutes a sununary of all that has gone before.
Sanitation in the loft helps to prevent virus, bacterial
and f ungus diseases as well as to keep parasites in check or eliminate them
altogether. It is one of the principal bases of health and success in dealing
with pigeons. It kecps fancy pigeons in show form, is fundamental in squab
production and gives homers a chance to do their best in racing.
Sanitation involves loft care. Ventilation, cleaning,
fceding, watering, bathing, even sunlight exposure are all concerned with
this subject as well as isolation, disinfection, preventive medication and
prevention of fielding.
What constitutes a filthy environment? Many factors,
some of which are invisible. A filthy loft is not necessarily one with inch-high
droppings under the perches. One of the top English fanciers cleans his loft
only twice a year, according to his own written words; a prominent and successful
fancier in Massachusetts, U.S.A., never cleans his until the breeding season.
Anesthetically filthy, yes, but perhaps not medically filthy. Thereare many
worse practices than leaving dung on the tloors. If successful men do it,
perhaps it is in order to ask, might they not be more successful if they removed
the droppings frequently? Perhaps these men feed the birds so that their food
never comes in contact with droppings.
A tilthy loft may be one infested with red mites; one
with pigeon tlies developing in the nest boiwls; one with Psittacosis spreaders
among thc birds; one with bath water older than 36 hours; one with lice on
the birds or Para-typhoid in many of the pigeons. These things one would not
see from a casual observation, but the owner knows, or should know, if he
is giving proper attention to his charges.
In disease prevention our aim must be:
( 1) To prevent our birds from coming into contact
with other pigeons, poultry, rodents, or the places these other species have
been.
(2) To prevent vectors such as sparrows, or mosquitoes,
from transporting infection from other species to our birds.
(3) ~To prevent our pigeons from being annoyed and
made anaemic by insects.
(4) To keep them away from contamination from intestinal
parasites.
(5) To prevent their being poisoned.
(6) To ensure proper ventilation.
(7) To prevent overcrowding.
(8) To prevent the spread of established diseases within
the loft.
(9) To keep our birds in such glowing health that those
diseases which develop in weakened birds, may never get a chance to develop.
( 10) To feed sufficient food and no more.
Here are the whys and the hows of the above points.
1. Prevent contact with pigeons,
poultry, rodents, or other species capable of transmitting diseases
Why? The answer is obvious. Poultry
yards, barn yards, wild pigeons coming to one's loft, are all sources of disease
contamination. You have read about the diseases which are transmissible from
other species to pigeons, and now you know how important it is to keep the
species separated.
How? By
not permitting an open left where one knows his birds can fly to these sources;
by preventing wild pigeons from even alighting on the loft, much less coming
in and eating or living with our birds; by destroying every wild pigeon as
soon af~ter it enters as possible; by quarantining every stray homer; by covering
fly pens to prevent droppings of wild pigeons or wild birds from falling in.
And of great importance, as
I shall point out in a later chapter, is the trapping of all the wild pigeons
in the neighbourhood, even if it entails a concerted effort by combined pigeon
fanciers to have city ordinances changed to permit such trappings and eradication.
2. Prevent vectors from transporting infection from other species or from
pigeon to pigeon
Why? One answer is obvious: Because
we want our birds to keep well. A less obvious reason is that we do not want
our pigeons blamed for being reservoirs of infection for other species. During
one epidemic of sleeping sickness in horses, authorities knowing that the
virus had been demonstrated in pigeons, stated that perhaps pigeons were the
latent source which kept the virus alive and that mosquitoes transmitted it
from them to the horses. Swine erysipelas, too, infects pigeons but we do
not want our birds blamed as being the reservoir. If mosquitoes cannot reach
our pigeons, then our birds certainly cannot be the reservoir.
How? By
not only screening our loft, making it impossible for a single mosquito to
enter, but by spraying with drugs with long residual effects which will stick
to walls and screens and kill mosquitoes and flies which light on them. Also
by including enough phenol or other mosquito repellant in our indoor sprays
ur paints to repel insects.
Easiest of all methods is to hang Vapona bars in the
lofts so that every t7ying insect which enters will be killed, as well as
external parasits if any are making their home on our birds.
By using wire on the flies and porches with mesh small
enough to preclude spatrows and by providing tops to the flies and porches
so that bird droppings are prevented from falling in.
3. Prevent pigeons from being annoyed by insects
Why? A
bird which is kept awake at nights by mosquitoes, lice, red bugs, ticks, bed-bugs,
cannot possibly be kept in the same good condition as the ones free from such
annoyances. And remember, too, that these pests often cause anaemia as well
as nervousness.
How? By
studying all the means of insect control and employing them; not by sitting
comfortably in an easy chair and planning to do it some day.
4. Keep pigeons
away from internal parasitic contamination
Why? Because these worms and protozoa
weaken our birds so materially. 'They cause anaemia, poison the blood, and
generally weaken the birds. Coccidia even change the blood picture considerably,
especially the blood sugar.
How? By
cleaning thc loft thoroughly once every 5 days during summer and once a week
during winter. By changing drinking water once a day. By never leaving bath
water available where droppings can fall into it for more than 12 hours. By
meticulously preventing any food or grit from any contamination by droppings.
This means that the food must not be thrown down on
the floor where there are droppings nor left on the clean floor where birds
may soil it. A covered food tray which prevents pigeons from stepping on food
is almost essential. Some of the best fliers clean the floor with scrapers
and mop with a damp rag before feeding and then give only the amount of food
that the birds will eat in a few minutes.
Self-feeders can also be arranged
which preclude food contamination and prevent the food from scattering or
coming in contact with droppings. Parasitic contamination can also be prevented
by using floor coverings,
litter, of absorbent material.
Dry sand has been proved satisfactory but it is heavy. Dampened peat moss
is favoured by some but it tends to become dusty and blow about. Shavings
are also clean, light, and absorbent. Chopped straw, such as the kind used
in poultry houses, makes a good litter. Pigeons do not scratch as hens do
and spend much less time on the floor than poultry.
Open loft must be restricted. We cannot permit pigeons
to eat snails and other intermediate hosts of tapeworms and expect to keep
them free from these parasites. Nor can we permit them to eat Sow and Pill
bugs without paying the penalty of having sickly birds infested with stomach
wall worms. Even pigeons which only occasionally light on the ground may find
these intermediate hosts coming out from under old boards. Miscellaneous old
boards lying around the loft should be removed and, if overturned, the bugs
should be scuffed and mashed. Inside the coop, derris sprinkled on the floor
and in cracks will kill all such insects and the flapping of wings will also
help spread this insect poison, harmless to the birds.
5. Prevent Poisoning
Why? No answer needed.
How? By watching the food, no mould being permitted;
by being careful there is no food or water where insect sprays may drift on
it and contaminate it.
Fielding should be restricted, especially in spring
when agricultural fertilizer is being spread. Often mixtures with tankage,
bone meal and other ingredients attractive to pigeons is spread and the birds
are poisoned and die after eating it. Caution should be practised when garden
sprays are used on nearby foliage so that pigeons do not eat the succulent
leaves and become poisoned by the sprays. Rodent poison, left where pigeons
can reach it or when it is dragged from a safe place by a rat, can cause deaths.
Warfarin mixed with grain is one of the principal rat poisons today and it,
as any other, should be well covered to preclude pigeons reaching it.
6. Insure adequate ventilation
Why? No
positive answer can be given except that it seems that pigeons given the maximum
amount of air, no matter how cold the temperature, are the healthiest. Pigeon
fanciers assure us this is true, but there are no published figures to test
it that I have been able to find. There are some results showing that birds
kept in lofts with no ventilation whatever were a sickly lot. And of course
the Bible says that Noah had 2 of nearly all the species of animals in the
world in a ship 3 stories high, with the only ventilation being found in a
roof opening 22 inches square.
How? Noah's
ventilating system, however adequate it was for the birds and animals, would
not suffice today. We know that even in climates where the temperature drops
to 30 degrees below zero, F., pigeons are kept in lofts completely open on
one side. They fluff out their feathers, `pull in their necks', and thrive.
But is this best? For early squab raising it is not, because too many youngsters
will freeze. Some protection is necessary. On cold nights a loft that can
be completely closed, just for the night, seems somewhat more humane and certainly
puts the owner more at ease. A loft arranged to prevent wind from blowing
through it is advisable. We are still told that `draughts are sure to cause
disease'. Many persons continue to believe that draughts cause human colds,
when recent discoveries show they have little or nothing to do with colds;
it is virus contracted from another person having a cold which is responsible.
I know of a loft which is divided so that the front
half is completely open and the other section closed except for a 3-ft. square
window. Both sections are the same otherwise. The birds all chose the closed
section in which to spend the night, using the open section for most of the
day.
In damp, badly ventilated lofts, there seems to be
much more disease than in airy lofts into which the sun can shine.
7. Do not overerowded
Whv? Some fanciers tell us that so long as there is a perch
for every bird the loft is not overerowded. Others will look into such a loft
and tell the owner he has too many birds. If fertility is considered, we may
observe that pigeon eggs are more likely to be fertile in under-populated
lofts.
How? We
can take lessons from the big squab farms where every inch is precious. Long
experience has taught them that: so long as all of the other features of sanitation
are meticulously cared for; and ifevery pair of birds has its own nest box;
if there is ample opportunity for all thc birds to eat at the same time; then
there is little cause to be alarmed about the health of the birds even though
it may seem that the lof~ts arc crowded.
Homing pigeons, Flights, Tipplers and other breeds
spending much time on the wing need less space in the loft than the same birds
kept for breeders or as prisoners.
8. Prevent the spread of established diseases in the loft
Why? To
avoid disappointment, save money, keep the birds healthy.
How? This
is where quarantine and medication are most important.
Every loft or breeding establishment
needs a quarantine cage and preferably two. Flying lofts obviously can do
well with two: one in which to keep strays until their owners are found; another
in which to put ailing birds either for diagnosis or treatment.
When I was a boy, if our pigeons got Sour Crop many
of them died. We isolated them, but often the infection had been started and
we were too late. Today, we dose the entire f7ock with an antibiotic in the
drinking water and the disease is conquered in a day or two. So it is with
many diseases: instead of quarantining or letting the bird die, we simply
dose them as a flock, or individually, ~Nith the proper drug, either by mouth
or by injection, and stop the disease. Sanitation involves keeping droppings
or nasal discharge off the food and in dosing drinking water to kill the germs
left by sick birds. Disease control involves medicating the sick and keeping
the spread to a minimum. Coccidiosis is a good example. Assuming that all
pigeons will have it, as we have seen, our object should be to keep the attack
as light as possible. This involves preventing re-infection as far as possible,
so we are especially careful with all sanitary measures.
If some of the birds develop blood poisoning which
apparently is the cause of their sick appearance, we inject those birds and
try to sterilize their blood.
Here I want to add a further note on the disposition
of strays and quarantine. Stray pigeons are bound to see your birds and either
enter your loft or try to. If you breed fancy pigeons, you do not want strays
sitting on the fly top leaving droppings where your birds can contact them.
And if you fly or race pigeons, you do not want strays coming into the lol~t.
There are men and boys in big cities who make considerable
money trapping strays and these men are willing to risk disease. The rest
of us whose birds these persons catch want to keep strays out or dispose of
them. Occasionally valuable birds drop in. Even they should be quarantined.
Homers which are exhausted more than likely quit because they are sick. Every
strange pigeon should be looked upon with suspicion.
Naturally, you will try to
find the owner if the bird is ringed. Keep it quarantined until you do.
9. Keep the pigeons in glowing health
Why? Because
healthy pigeons, when they become infected, are able to recover from many
diseases easier than those in run-down condition.
How? By
proper diet, by sanitation which prevents the spread of disease.
10. Feed only .sufficien! food
Why? Because
too much food is a health menace when it becomes soiled from droppings. When
birds are overfed they become choosey, picking out only certain grains and
ignoring others which might offer better nourishment.
How? By watching until the birds
show they are no longer hungry and then removing all uneaten food. At the
next feeding give the amount they ate
at the previous feeding.
Pigeons feeding squabs need more and more food as the
youngsters grow older, so one must feed them oftener, giving the old birds
all they will eat without leaving a grain or a pellet.
An occasional complaint of neighbours against pigeon
fanciers is, that their compost heaps or manure piles in the backyards breed
flies to infest the neighbourhood. Occasionally the decomposing manure odours
are wafted by breezes where they are not appreciated. Aside from the aesthetic
objections, there are other important health considerations.
Flies carry parasite eggs and are notorious spreaders
of coccidiosis. Unscreened and uncovered piles of manure treasured for garden
fertilizer may be reservoirs of parasite eggs. Every fancier knows how the
birds seem to enjoy picking around on such piles. We keep a large compost
pile for our garden where we put leaves, sheep manure, pigeon manure and anything
else which will rot and make fertilizer. The pigeons have often flown to it
upon alighting from their period of exercise instead of going through the
loft trap. It became such a nuisance in trying to keep the birds away that
it had to be screened.
If you have such a pile and
can shield it from the pigeons and have no intention of using it for fertilizer,
simply spread a thin layer of borax over it every time you add new cleanings
to the pile and flies will not be able to breed there.
Yearbook 1986 – NTU Zeljko Fajdetic - Croatia
04/11/2002 Zeljko Fajdetic - Crikvenica

©
Copyright 1998 by Zeljko Fajdetic - C R O A T I A
Sanitation and Disease Prevention
These two subjects, sanitation
and disease prevention, are so closely allied that they must be considered
together. Sanitation is basic in disease prevention. as basic as isolation.
This chaptcr constitutes a sununary of all that has gone before.
Sanitation in the loft helps to prevent virus, bacterial
and f ungus diseases as well as to keep parasites in check or eliminate them
altogether. It is one of the principal bases of health and success in dealing
with pigeons. It kecps fancy pigeons in show form, is fundamental in squab
production and gives homers a chance to do their best in racing.
Sanitation involves loft care. Ventilation, cleaning,
fceding, watering, bathing, even sunlight exposure are all concerned with
this subject as well as isolation, disinfection, preventive medication and
prevention of fielding.
What constitutes a filthy environment? Many factors,
some of which are invisible. A filthy loft is not necessarily one with inch-high
droppings under the perches. One of the top English fanciers cleans his loft
only twice a year, according to his own written words; a prominent and successful
fancier in Massachusetts, U.S.A., never cleans his until the breeding season.
Anesthetically filthy, yes, but perhaps not medically filthy. Thereare many
worse practices than leaving dung on the tloors. If successful men do it,
perhaps it is in order to ask, might they not be more successful if they removed
the droppings frequently? Perhaps these men feed the birds so that their food
never comes in contact with droppings.
A tilthy loft may be one infested with red mites; one
with pigeon tlies developing in the nest boiwls; one with Psittacosis spreaders
among thc birds; one with bath water older than 36 hours; one with lice on
the birds or Para-typhoid in many of the pigeons. These things one would not
see from a casual observation, but the owner knows, or should know, if he
is giving proper attention to his charges.
In disease prevention our aim must be:
( 1) To prevent our birds from coming into contact
with other pigeons, poultry, rodents, or the places these other species have
been.
(2) To prevent vectors such as sparrows, or mosquitoes,
from transporting infection from other species to our birds.
(3) ~To prevent our pigeons from being annoyed and
made anaemic by insects.
(4) To keep them away from contamination from intestinal
parasites.
(5) To prevent their being poisoned.
(6) To ensure proper ventilation.
(7) To prevent overcrowding.
(8) To prevent the spread of established diseases within
the loft.
(9) To keep our birds in such glowing health that those
diseases which develop in weakened birds, may never get a chance to develop.
( 10) To feed sufficient food and no more.
Here are the whys and the hows of the above points.
1. Prevent contact with pigeons, poultry, rodents, or other species capable of transmitting diseases
Why? The answer is obvious. Poultry
yards, barn yards, wild pigeons coming to one's loft, are all sources of disease
contamination. You have read about the diseases which are transmissible from
other species to pigeons, and now you know how important it is to keep the
species separated.
How? By
not permitting an open left where one knows his birds can fly to these sources;
by preventing wild pigeons from even alighting on the loft, much less coming
in and eating or living with our birds; by destroying every wild pigeon as
soon af~ter it enters as possible; by quarantining every stray homer; by covering
fly pens to prevent droppings of wild pigeons or wild birds from falling in.
And of great importance, as I shall point out in a later chapter, is the trapping of all the wild pigeons in the neighbourhood, even if it entails a concerted effort by combined pigeon fanciers to have city ordinances changed to permit such trappings and eradication.
2. Prevent vectors from transporting infection from other species or from
pigeon to pigeon
Why? One answer is obvious: Because
we want our birds to keep well. A less obvious reason is that we do not want
our pigeons blamed for being reservoirs of infection for other species. During
one epidemic of sleeping sickness in horses, authorities knowing that the
virus had been demonstrated in pigeons, stated that perhaps pigeons were the
latent source which kept the virus alive and that mosquitoes transmitted it
from them to the horses. Swine erysipelas, too, infects pigeons but we do
not want our birds blamed as being the reservoir. If mosquitoes cannot reach
our pigeons, then our birds certainly cannot be the reservoir.
How? By
not only screening our loft, making it impossible for a single mosquito to
enter, but by spraying with drugs with long residual effects which will stick
to walls and screens and kill mosquitoes and flies which light on them. Also
by including enough phenol or other mosquito repellant in our indoor sprays
ur paints to repel insects.
Easiest of all methods is to hang Vapona bars in the
lofts so that every t7ying insect which enters will be killed, as well as
external parasits if any are making their home on our birds.
By using wire on the flies and porches with mesh small
enough to preclude spatrows and by providing tops to the flies and porches
so that bird droppings are prevented from falling in.
3. Prevent pigeons from being annoyed by insects
Why? A
bird which is kept awake at nights by mosquitoes, lice, red bugs, ticks, bed-bugs,
cannot possibly be kept in the same good condition as the ones free from such
annoyances. And remember, too, that these pests often cause anaemia as well
as nervousness.
How? By
studying all the means of insect control and employing them; not by sitting
comfortably in an easy chair and planning to do it some day.
4. Keep pigeons
away from internal parasitic contamination
Why? Because these worms and protozoa
weaken our birds so materially. 'They cause anaemia, poison the blood, and
generally weaken the birds. Coccidia even change the blood picture considerably,
especially the blood sugar.
How? By
cleaning thc loft thoroughly once every 5 days during summer and once a week
during winter. By changing drinking water once a day. By never leaving bath
water available where droppings can fall into it for more than 12 hours. By
meticulously preventing any food or grit from any contamination by droppings.
This means that the food must not be thrown down on
the floor where there are droppings nor left on the clean floor where birds
may soil it. A covered food tray which prevents pigeons from stepping on food
is almost essential. Some of the best fliers clean the floor with scrapers
and mop with a damp rag before feeding and then give only the amount of food
that the birds will eat in a few minutes.
Self-feeders can also be arranged
which preclude food contamination and prevent the food from scattering or
coming in contact with droppings. Parasitic contamination can also be prevented
by using floor coverings,
litter, of absorbent material.
Dry sand has been proved satisfactory but it is heavy. Dampened peat moss
is favoured by some but it tends to become dusty and blow about. Shavings
are also clean, light, and absorbent. Chopped straw, such as the kind used
in poultry houses, makes a good litter. Pigeons do not scratch as hens do
and spend much less time on the floor than poultry.
Open loft must be restricted. We cannot permit pigeons
to eat snails and other intermediate hosts of tapeworms and expect to keep
them free from these parasites. Nor can we permit them to eat Sow and Pill
bugs without paying the penalty of having sickly birds infested with stomach
wall worms. Even pigeons which only occasionally light on the ground may find
these intermediate hosts coming out from under old boards. Miscellaneous old
boards lying around the loft should be removed and, if overturned, the bugs
should be scuffed and mashed. Inside the coop, derris sprinkled on the floor
and in cracks will kill all such insects and the flapping of wings will also
help spread this insect poison, harmless to the birds.
5. Prevent Poisoning
Why? No answer needed.
How? By watching the food, no mould being permitted;
by being careful there is no food or water where insect sprays may drift on
it and contaminate it.
Fielding should be restricted, especially in spring
when agricultural fertilizer is being spread. Often mixtures with tankage,
bone meal and other ingredients attractive to pigeons is spread and the birds
are poisoned and die after eating it. Caution should be practised when garden
sprays are used on nearby foliage so that pigeons do not eat the succulent
leaves and become poisoned by the sprays. Rodent poison, left where pigeons
can reach it or when it is dragged from a safe place by a rat, can cause deaths.
Warfarin mixed with grain is one of the principal rat poisons today and it,
as any other, should be well covered to preclude pigeons reaching it.
6. Insure adequate ventilation
Why? No
positive answer can be given except that it seems that pigeons given the maximum
amount of air, no matter how cold the temperature, are the healthiest. Pigeon
fanciers assure us this is true, but there are no published figures to test
it that I have been able to find. There are some results showing that birds
kept in lofts with no ventilation whatever were a sickly lot. And of course
the Bible says that Noah had 2 of nearly all the species of animals in the
world in a ship 3 stories high, with the only ventilation being found in a
roof opening 22 inches square.
How? Noah's
ventilating system, however adequate it was for the birds and animals, would
not suffice today. We know that even in climates where the temperature drops
to 30 degrees below zero, F., pigeons are kept in lofts completely open on
one side. They fluff out their feathers, `pull in their necks', and thrive.
But is this best? For early squab raising it is not, because too many youngsters
will freeze. Some protection is necessary. On cold nights a loft that can
be completely closed, just for the night, seems somewhat more humane and certainly
puts the owner more at ease. A loft arranged to prevent wind from blowing
through it is advisable. We are still told that `draughts are sure to cause
disease'. Many persons continue to believe that draughts cause human colds,
when recent discoveries show they have little or nothing to do with colds;
it is virus contracted from another person having a cold which is responsible.
I know of a loft which is divided so that the front
half is completely open and the other section closed except for a 3-ft. square
window. Both sections are the same otherwise. The birds all chose the closed
section in which to spend the night, using the open section for most of the
day.
In damp, badly ventilated lofts, there seems to be
much more disease than in airy lofts into which the sun can shine.
7. Do not overerowded
Whv? Some fanciers tell us that so long as there is a perch
for every bird the loft is not overerowded. Others will look into such a loft
and tell the owner he has too many birds. If fertility is considered, we may
observe that pigeon eggs are more likely to be fertile in under-populated
lofts.
How? We
can take lessons from the big squab farms where every inch is precious. Long
experience has taught them that: so long as all of the other features of sanitation
are meticulously cared for; and ifevery pair of birds has its own nest box;
if there is ample opportunity for all thc birds to eat at the same time; then
there is little cause to be alarmed about the health of the birds even though
it may seem that the lof~ts arc crowded.
Homing pigeons, Flights, Tipplers and other breeds
spending much time on the wing need less space in the loft than the same birds
kept for breeders or as prisoners.
8. Prevent the spread of established diseases in the loft
Why? To
avoid disappointment, save money, keep the birds healthy.
How? This
is where quarantine and medication are most important.
Every loft or breeding establishment
needs a quarantine cage and preferably two. Flying lofts obviously can do
well with two: one in which to keep strays until their owners are found; another
in which to put ailing birds either for diagnosis or treatment.
When I was a boy, if our pigeons got Sour Crop many
of them died. We isolated them, but often the infection had been started and
we were too late. Today, we dose the entire f7ock with an antibiotic in the
drinking water and the disease is conquered in a day or two. So it is with
many diseases: instead of quarantining or letting the bird die, we simply
dose them as a flock, or individually, ~Nith the proper drug, either by mouth
or by injection, and stop the disease. Sanitation involves keeping droppings
or nasal discharge off the food and in dosing drinking water to kill the germs
left by sick birds. Disease control involves medicating the sick and keeping
the spread to a minimum. Coccidiosis is a good example. Assuming that all
pigeons will have it, as we have seen, our object should be to keep the attack
as light as possible. This involves preventing re-infection as far as possible,
so we are especially careful with all sanitary measures.
If some of the birds develop blood poisoning which
apparently is the cause of their sick appearance, we inject those birds and
try to sterilize their blood.
Here I want to add a further note on the disposition
of strays and quarantine. Stray pigeons are bound to see your birds and either
enter your loft or try to. If you breed fancy pigeons, you do not want strays
sitting on the fly top leaving droppings where your birds can contact them.
And if you fly or race pigeons, you do not want strays coming into the lol~t.
There are men and boys in big cities who make considerable
money trapping strays and these men are willing to risk disease. The rest
of us whose birds these persons catch want to keep strays out or dispose of
them. Occasionally valuable birds drop in. Even they should be quarantined.
Homers which are exhausted more than likely quit because they are sick. Every
strange pigeon should be looked upon with suspicion.
Naturally, you will try to
find the owner if the bird is ringed. Keep it quarantined until you do.
9. Keep the pigeons in glowing health
Why? Because
healthy pigeons, when they become infected, are able to recover from many
diseases easier than those in run-down condition.
How? By
proper diet, by sanitation which prevents the spread of disease.
10. Feed only .sufficien! food
Why? Because
too much food is a health menace when it becomes soiled from droppings. When
birds are overfed they become choosey, picking out only certain grains and
ignoring others which might offer better nourishment.
How? By watching until the birds
show they are no longer hungry and then removing all uneaten food. At the
next feeding give the amount they ate
at the previous feeding.
Pigeons feeding squabs need more and more food as the
youngsters grow older, so one must feed them oftener, giving the old birds
all they will eat without leaving a grain or a pellet.
An occasional complaint of neighbours against pigeon
fanciers is, that their compost heaps or manure piles in the backyards breed
flies to infest the neighbourhood. Occasionally the decomposing manure odours
are wafted by breezes where they are not appreciated. Aside from the aesthetic
objections, there are other important health considerations.
Flies carry parasite eggs and are notorious spreaders
of coccidiosis. Unscreened and uncovered piles of manure treasured for garden
fertilizer may be reservoirs of parasite eggs. Every fancier knows how the
birds seem to enjoy picking around on such piles. We keep a large compost
pile for our garden where we put leaves, sheep manure, pigeon manure and anything
else which will rot and make fertilizer. The pigeons have often flown to it
upon alighting from their period of exercise instead of going through the
loft trap. It became such a nuisance in trying to keep the birds away that
it had to be screened.
If you have such a pile and can shield it from the pigeons and have no intention of using it for fertilizer, simply spread a thin layer of borax over it every time you add new cleanings to the pile and flies will not be able to breed there.
Yearbook 1986 – NTU Zeljko Fajdetic - Croatia





