I think you might have gave them too much of a challenge on their first release. I release in sight of the loft the first few times and make sure they have not eat in at least 12 hours on release. Then I move about a ½ mile away and keep doubling the distance as long as they make it home before me.
So now I have taken them in each direction to release, but this time I did it closer to home, about one city block, (which where I am doing it is about 0.1 miles). Thay have all come back from each of these "drops" (if you can even call it that - I just walked a block away with them in an old cat carrier!) My question is is it now safe to go back up t the 1/2 mile mark in each direction or should I do another round in each direction of, say, 1/4 mile distance? And pertaining to your condition that they "make it home before me" - they have not been doing that for the most part, and I am walking not driving. But because I have been releasing them so close to home I am not sure if this is because they are confused or because they are enjoying stretching their wings and don't want to come back right away. I am leaning toward that later, except for one bird (I'll come back to him in a sec).
Sometimes they have been out a couple hours after the release (flying and sitting roofs, I assume), but other times they have gotten back a few minutes after I finished walking home... will they speed up thier return when I am releasing them farther from home? In both cases they had not had food for about 12 hours. Again I am releasing just for pleasure, not racing so I am more concerned about dependability than speed, but I also don't want them taking taking days on longer drops.
I also have one bird (who I mentioned earlier) who doesn't seem to fly with the others. He is homerXroller (well actually I don' really know - he was sold to me as homer, and I do think he has homer in him, but he is clearly smaller, rounder, and cobbier than fulll homer) and when I release he just flys to the nearest roof and sits there looking around while all ther others take off doing laps in the air. He has made it back from each of the short drops (he was not among the group I released 1/2 mile from home) but often he takes longer than the others and I never see him just circling in the sky. He is improving in time each return (first 0.1m release he didn't come back til the next day, next one the same but faster, third he came back late the same day, and most recently he was the second bird back (but the other took longer on this most recent drop - I suspect they were smelling the roses!) How far is it reasonable to expect a bird like this to come home from? I want to push him but sentence him to death!
I realize these might be weird questions, but I find I am in the minorty when it comes to homing pigeons, since I want to do more than just free fly, but I don't want to race either. I want my pigeons to home decently and be beautiful and calm. Those are my main goals. That's what I have no problem flying some of my crossbred birds. I like the feathered legs and colors! I have Opals, Andulusians, blacks, almonds/qualmonds, ice, and saddles. When I am done breeding this year I will have more homer crosses than pure homers, but I don;'t mind. It was mainly due to mismatched numbers in the sexes and odd numbers in some breeds, but I figured since they are unlikely to sell well so I will just fly them and see how they do. I will have Homers crossed with monks, WOE tumblers, Indian fantails, Voorburg Shield Croppers and German Beauty homer crosses. I will also be flying (but not homing) some roller/Komorner tumbler crosses and highlflyer/Kormoner tumbler crosses. I'll probably try to even out the pairs by breed next year, and just let the crossbreeds pair how they like... but you know if if I have a crossbreed that flys well maybe I'll pair it back with another homer. My monk/homer corsses fly very well and so far seem to home well.
Well I'll stop rambling now!