Free flight flock

GBov

Songster
10 Years
Apr 3, 2009
617
14
154
Trying to find SOMETHING to raise for meat that the city ordinances havnt managed to ban and have started toying with pigeons. Living in Ireland for many years I would watch the flocks set out to fly in the evenings when people got home from work but reading on here I dont see many people talking about flying their meat birds. Are meat birds let out to fly or if not, why not? Living in Florida now it would be nice to have something that woulnt mind the heat and could forrage a bit for itself, hence costing less but I also dont want to loose the lot so any info and ideas would be really GREAT
big_smile.png


Cheers
 
Can't speak for Florida but in Indiana, enjoy feeding the hawks. Whenever I let them out to fly, hawks pick them off.
 
Ah, I was wondering about hawks!

What kinds of pigeons am I seeing when I see peoples flocks flying if they arnt worried about hawks or kestrels? I do see flocks flying down here. Would they be wild pigeons then?
 
don't know of anyone that keeps pigeons that would lose them at night, having many of the larger owls and hawks resident year around would make for a little flock.

Also coinciding you want to EAT these birds and people poison 'nuisance' animals you may end up very ill... weather they birds eat some poisoned mice.rats, get into bug spray when mosquito are sprayed for or get poisoned directly- or eat from a carcass that has something that can be transfer like roundworm, ringworm, tric- and all.

Doves/pigeons released in FL are racers that are actually racing at that time, blond (white) homing pigeons for special events, magician's doves (but these are inside), or shows for tumblers/rollers and the like.
 
Meat birds like kings are heavier, so not that fast at flying easy meal for all hawks, plus most people eat squabs before they start flying. 5 weeks old
 
The heavy breeds wont fly very far anyway. Mine just hang around the yard or on top of the barn.

I lose one to hawks every now and then, but they enjoy being out, and I enjoy seeing them.

At night they are inside where an owl would have a very hard time getting in, so I've never lost one that way.

I started out with 20, and eat some every now and then. I have about 40- 50 now and about a dozen eggs that will hatch in the next few weeks.

I might have more if I kept them enclosed full time, but I wouldnt get to see them fly, and would probably have to feed them more
Picture006.jpg
 
Last edited:
I can see where the size of the pigeon could influence hawks. I had rollers and then helmits, both small. Maybe hawks wouldn't be as hard on a larger breed? Again Indiana is not Florida.
 
Thanks for the replies guys
big_smile.png


The only info I have on pigeons is from living over seas and I know its different here. And the flocks I use to see flying about Dublin in the evenings - NOT NIGHT TIME, just late afternoon - were most likely homers and tumblers let out for exercise. I didnt even know that there was such a thing as meat pigeons
gig.gif
Silly me
gig.gif
Of course there are!

I liked the look of the hutch? coop? housing? Dont know the proper name of pigeon housing even but Bear Foot Farm's pigeons look the bees knees
big_smile.png


If one had, say, 6 pair of breeders how much meat will one actually raise in the year and how much will one feed them? I know that the parent feeds the squabs so that it looks like one is feeding HUGE amounts to a small bird so some figures will be most helpful.

Oh, with meat pigeons, how many per person make a meal? With quail it would take HEAPS to feed my family of 5!
 
Quote:
I have been asking these questions on the amount of feed to raise the squab and carcass weights produced in the real world for quite a while now ... I am still waiting for an answer. ANYONE ???
 
Quote:
I have been asking these questions on the amount of feed to raise the squab and carcass weights produced in the real world for quite a while now ... I am still waiting for an answer. ANYONE ???

See if this link helps. Looks like it is a publication put out in 2007 by an Austrailian group. http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0011/213221/Squab-raising.pdf The pigeons in the study were utility kings. The article says:
• 25 breeding pairs will eat about 3 kg of feed daily.
• 1 breeding pair will eat about 45 kg of feed and 4 kg of grit yearly.
• 1 pair of birds will eat 22 kg of feed to breeding age.
A 500 g squab is produced from 3 kg of feed, giving a feed conversion ratio (FCR) of 6:1.
 
Last edited:

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom