Guest mick bowler Posted July 16, 2010 Report Posted July 16, 2010 Does anyone have a copy of the ill fated Nantes Centenary race? After a copy if anyone does. I just realised i lost (threw away by accident) my certs and result
greenlands Posted July 16, 2010 Report Posted July 16, 2010 Hi Mick,that was some sh** race I sent two of what I concidered my best.I got one the day after the race finished like a razor blade,she was never the same again.Someone should have been taken to task over that liberation.Hope you get a copy mate, I've never had one.Lindsay.
blackdog Posted July 16, 2010 Report Posted July 16, 2010 remember it very well, i sent 6, got 1 in race time, 3rd day,3rd fed, 5th combine, should never have been let go, they only did because all the media were there covering the event, got 4 more back in the next few days and my all pooler was picked up dead on sellafield
dicie Posted July 16, 2010 Report Posted July 16, 2010 I recall reading and hearing alot about that race from friends.. Could never figure out how someone wasnt actually questioned over that liberation.
Guest mick bowler Posted July 21, 2010 Report Posted July 21, 2010 Bump, anyone??? It certainly was a strange race alright. I had one on the day, one of only 2 or 3 in Oxford (think 3). I sent 12 and by the next evening i had 11, and never saw one missing one again, even though that was my pool bird. A guy in our club topped combine from a previous Nantes, he sent 10 i think it was never saw a feather for about 2 or 3 weeks, never got the winner back. It was a day of luck for the birds, i think all the early birds got lost on the channel, and probably perished. There were reports of 100's of birds being washed up on beaches and the guy we used to go sea fishing at Weymouth with told us one weekend (around this race time) when he pulled in the nets it was full of dead racing pigeons.
PIGEON_MAN Posted July 21, 2010 Report Posted July 21, 2010 Can you remember what year this was,I remember sending and think I clocked next day,the result was published in the BHW If I remember someone may have that copy if we know the year.
JohnQuinn Posted July 21, 2010 Report Posted July 21, 2010 Can you remember what year this was,I remember sending and think I clocked next day,the result was published in the BHW If I remember someone may have that copy if we know the year. It'll be 100 years after the first one :D :D
blackdog Posted July 21, 2010 Report Posted July 21, 2010 Can you remember what year this was,I remember sending and think I clocked next day,the result was published in the BHW If I remember someone may have that copy if we know the year. 1997 mate
JohnQuinn Posted July 21, 2010 Report Posted July 21, 2010 I went into the NFC website results section and lo and behold the results only go back to 1998!! D'ya Think this is just a coincidence ??
Guest redlad24 Posted July 21, 2010 Report Posted July 21, 2010 was that on channel 4? was only 13 at the time and starting up seen tht docu? shoiwed a pigeon been clocked into lycetts??? maybe im wrong
blackdog Posted July 21, 2010 Report Posted July 21, 2010 On Sunday, June 29, 1997, a great race was held to celebrate the centenary of the Royal Pigeon Racing Association. More than 60,000 homing pigeons were released at 6:30 AM in the morning from a field in Nantes (southern France), flying to lofts all over southern England 400 to 500 miles away. By 11:00 AM the majority of the racing birds had made it out of France and were over the English Channel. They should have arrived at their lofts by early afternoon. They didn't. A few thousand of the birds straggled in over the next few days. Most were never seen again. In pigeon racing terms, the loss of so many birds was practically unheard of, a disaster. Any one bird could get lost, but tens of thousands? Hagstrum, in studying this event, noticed an odd fact. At the very same time the racing pigeons were crossing the Channel, 11:00 AM, the Concorde supersonic transport (SST) airliner was flying along the Channel on its morning flight from Paris to New York. In flight the SST generates a shock wave that pounds down toward the earth, a carpet of sound almost a hundred miles wide. The racing pigeons flying below the Concorde could not have escaped the intense wave of sound. The birds that did eventually arrive at their lofts were lucky enough to be very slow racers -- they were still south of the Channel when the SST passed over, ahead of them. Perhaps, Hagstrum suggests, racing pigeons locate where they are using atmospheric infrasounds that the SST obliterated. These very low frequency sounds travel thousands of miles from their sources. That's why you can hear distant thunder. Pigeons can hear infrasounds very well, because a pigeon ear is particularly good at detecting very low frequency sounds. What sort of infrasounds are available to guide pigeons? All over the world, there is one infrasound pigeons should all be able to hear -- the very low frequency acoustic shock waves generated by ocean waves banging against one another! Like an acoustic beacon, a constant stream of these tiny seismic waves would always say where the ocean is. Even more valuable to a racing pigeon looking for home, infrasounds reflect from cliffs, mountains, and other steep-sided features of the earth's surface. Ocean wave infrasounds reflecting off of local terrain could provide a pigeon with a detailed sound picture of its surroundings, near and far. Hagstrum's suggestion explains neatly what happened to the lost pigeons in the great race of 97. The enormous wave of infrasound generated by the SST's sonic boom would have blotted out all of the normal oceanic infrasound information. Any bird flying in its path would loose all orientation. This same infrasound mapping sense may play an important part in the long distance navigation of other creatures. It could explain how Monarch butterflies in the US are able to find one small locality in Mexico, or how Brazilian sea turtles are able to find their way to their homes on tiny Ascension Island a thousand miles out in the Atlantic. I wish I could hear these sounds. I would never be lost again.
JohnQuinn Posted July 21, 2010 Report Posted July 21, 2010 Nice bit of work, can you no find the result? I canny get it anywhere!
Guest Davy Fleming Posted July 21, 2010 Report Posted July 21, 2010 blackdog, very interesting mate well done
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