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Posted
can anybody tell me where the trouser feathers are on our featherd friends and can you tell form from them thanks jimmy :-/
;Di know i,d be on form with feather trousers  ;D ;D ;D                 andy.

 

 

Posted

Jimmy, I think the feathered legs (and sometimes feet) is a throwback to the Antwerp Cumulet or the Liege Smerle that were used in developing the modern racing pigeon. I can't remember which one had feathered legs.

Posted

'Lost in translation' perhaps? Never did find out the meaning of a similar phrase where the original had been Hungarian, translated into Dutch, and from there into English:-

 

The wing shape best able to improve performance capacity through speed is not the old-fashioned, broad shovel form, but a somewhat longer, smaller wing type. Such pigeons are usually open on the back and their "trouser pins" are shorter.

Posted
Jimmy, I think the feathered legs (and sometimes feet) is a throwback to the Antwerp Cumulet or the Liege Smerle that were used in developing the modern racing pigeon. I can't remember which one had feathered legs.

 

the strains that caried the feathered legs were Gurnay , Hanseens ,also the Tournier as his birds originated from Gurnay and the Ipswitch strain Westcotes  ;)

Posted
do you secendry flight ?

 

sorry do you mean secendry flights or  feathered legs??

Posted

The Cumulet and Smerle were primarily sprinters, as I recall. I have one family of birds that are good sprinters and when they are inbred a little too closely they produce feathered stockings and feet. I have never had one race well, but others have.

Posted

soffles had most feather leg of the breeds i have seen

                                                         stan

Posted

are you refering to the secondary wing underneath the bird  small white feathers ?

Posted

i dont know about telling form from these feathers theres far more other pointers that say form , although when i buy birds in this is one thing that i look at and i like theses to sit tight to the wing and not be over long as can reduce there areodynamics during flight  unless its a blow home  ;)

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