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Kyleakin Lofts

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Everything posted by Kyleakin Lofts

  1. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/T3-JUNIOR-THIMBLELESS-PIGEON-CLOCK-DATA-PRINTER/162929829418?hash=item25ef5fe62a:g:xVAAAOSwXvdanGHY This one has a data printer and case and at least the display is showing. It is on an auction and currently sitting at £74 with 5 days to go.
  2. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/racing-pigeon-clock-Thimble-T3-junior/382394315119?hash=item59087a316f:g:6xwAAOSwmaBaeE7d This one needs a service. Is it worth the risk of paying the full asking price £55. The battery is completely flat so no display is showing. Remember to add your £70 for the service.
  3. It will cost you £54 at B Leefe or £57 at Linell for a service plus your postage down there of around £12, so watch when you buy one from Ebay.
  4. Excellent line up of pigeons.
  5. I take it you were reading the funny pages. :D
  6. Probably just a method of officially bringing an end to their use. This then promotes the use of computer clocks or ETS.
  7. Good morning all.
  8. Obviously attempting to get rid.
  9. IMPORTANT NOTICE - PUNCTURING CLOCKS AUDIT Please note that any puncturing clock still in use needs to be re-registered at the Reddings prior to the start of the 2018 racing season. Failure to do so will disqualify the clock from any future use. Puncturing clocks may not be sold, loaned or disposed of, for the use of any other person in any RPRA competition. Puncturing clocks should be registered with Julia Field 01452 858244 juliafield@rpra.org Ian Evans General Manager
  10. The link works. I've seen this one before Billy.
  11. That would be good. I'm a tight wad as well. Give us a precis of what it contains Peter.
  12. Message Abbeypap on here.
  13. Good morning all.
  14. My brother uses mine. He says it is an excellent accelerant for the compost. He has three compost bins. As one is used, the next is turned over and so with the third one, then he starts again. I know he uses horse manure as well and sometimes he gets cow dung too. I don't think he puts any of them straight onto the ground, but I shall soon find out because the boy is wanting to start a vegetable patch like his uncle.
  15. Another good deed done today, despite dying with man flu, I was at Morrisons check out behind an old lady in the queue. Her bill came to £56.83 but when she counted out all her change and she only had just under £50. I thought she was probably someone’s Nan and I’d like to think someone would have helped my Nan out. She didn’t want me to help her but I insisted, and in no time we had all her shopping back on the shelves.
  16. As I said, worms and coccidiosis. I knew someone would eventually agree with me. On a side note, lad I knew used to snare them and use ferrets. He never cleared an area, just to ensure he was recalled the following year. His freezer was full of them.
  17. Wasted on the young ones. Tommy Cooper, Morcambe and Wise, etc, performers to entertain.
  18. The old ones are good.
  19. Andy your biggest problem is that their droppings look a little like peas, so the pigeons might eat them, apart from, as Robert said, the disturbance they cause at night whilst under the loft. I do not know what they carry that is transferable to pigeons, but the normal suspects would be tapeworm, roundworm, coccidiosis, etc. For me, prevention is better than cure, so get that dug out there at night. :D
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