The Prague Post - Poland's pigeon fanciers eye moving up the pecking order

EUR -
AED 4.318908
AFN 73.500454
ALL 96.032488
AMD 443.088322
ANG 2.104749
AOA 1078.405264
ARS 1635.60551
AUD 1.661342
AWG 2.110945
AZN 2.003379
BAM 1.950466
BBD 2.370098
BDT 143.806743
BGN 1.937655
BHD 0.443675
BIF 3491.55193
BMD 1.176014
BND 1.489701
BOB 8.131797
BRL 6.035329
BSD 1.176722
BTN 107.078182
BWP 15.487856
BYN 3.406511
BYR 23049.875337
BZD 2.366707
CAD 1.606112
CDF 2598.990908
CHF 0.904731
CLF 0.02603
CLP 1027.824219
CNY 8.065281
CNH 8.085326
COP 4439.652953
CRC 555.257973
CUC 1.176014
CUP 31.164372
CVE 109.964289
CZK 24.2294
DJF 209.546279
DKK 7.47098
DOP 71.032431
DZD 151.696233
EGP 56.586029
ERN 17.640211
ETB 182.52393
FJD 2.578469
FKP 0.872193
GBP 0.877101
GEL 3.151735
GGP 0.872193
GHS 12.544748
GIP 0.872193
GMD 85.281706
GNF 10320.776592
GTQ 9.026316
GYD 246.207762
HKD 9.199917
HNL 31.140386
HRK 7.527314
HTG 154.260779
HUF 378.008512
IDR 19821.011167
ILS 3.682452
IMP 0.872193
INR 107.561126
IQD 1541.525526
IRR 1545652.903542
ISK 143.497369
JEP 0.872193
JMD 183.470477
JOD 0.833824
JPY 184.474287
KES 151.706036
KGS 102.842172
KHR 4718.117798
KMF 490.39754
KPW 1058.412651
KRW 1714.616477
KWD 0.360495
KYD 0.980681
KZT 586.114771
LAK 25186.838526
LBP 105377.655749
LKR 363.909374
LRD 215.93491
LSL 18.725338
LTL 3.472463
LVL 0.711359
LYD 7.432296
MAD 10.776875
MDL 20.139897
MGA 4991.0966
MKD 61.477145
MMK 2469.503289
MNT 4196.414205
MOP 9.483703
MRU 46.967563
MUR 54.6138
MVR 18.169205
MWK 2040.615579
MXN 20.353475
MYR 4.607032
MZN 75.153195
NAD 18.725576
NGN 1599.367171
NIO 43.311559
NOK 11.204174
NPR 171.317499
NZD 1.973728
OMR 0.44888
PAB 1.176787
PEN 3.948403
PGK 5.135912
PHP 68.423435
PKR 328.900801
PLN 4.225995
PYG 7579.885166
QAR 4.277702
RON 5.096495
RSD 117.055419
RUB 91.231478
RWF 1719.218186
SAR 4.410997
SBD 9.461248
SCR 16.182609
SDG 707.394198
SEK 10.681871
SGD 1.493467
SHP 0.882315
SLE 28.870821
SLL 24660.425812
SOS 671.335609
SRD 44.361525
STD 24341.116427
STN 24.432977
SVC 10.296449
SYP 129.978928
SZL 18.721848
THB 36.922728
TJS 11.197042
TMT 4.116049
TND 3.410972
TOP 2.83156
TRY 51.708844
TTD 7.987817
TWD 37.083838
TZS 3004.715696
UAH 50.735469
UGX 4242.416638
USD 1.176014
UYU 45.205036
UZS 14297.597554
VES 490.205227
VND 30788.047772
VUV 139.926704
WST 3.193944
XAF 654.134816
XAG 0.012439
XAU 0.000219
XCD 3.178237
XCG 2.120819
XDR 0.813534
XOF 654.134816
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.538247
ZAR 18.950232
ZMK 10585.535608
ZMW 22.235061
ZWL 378.676044
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    15.36

    -0.26%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    93.77

    +0.05%

  • AZN

    4.4700

    208.45

    +2.14%

  • CMSD

    -0.3100

    23.28

    -1.33%

  • CMSC

    -0.4299

    23.45

    -1.83%

  • RELX

    0.7300

    34.79

    +2.1%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    18.4

    -0.33%

  • GSK

    1.0600

    59.13

    +1.79%

  • RIO

    0.2500

    99.34

    +0.25%

  • BCE

    0.6400

    26.31

    +2.43%

  • BCC

    -0.9000

    82.74

    -1.09%

  • JRI

    0.1200

    13.29

    +0.9%

  • BTI

    -0.0200

    62.65

    -0.03%

  • BP

    0.8700

    38.86

    +2.24%

Poland's pigeon fanciers eye moving up the pecking order
Poland's pigeon fanciers eye moving up the pecking order

Poland's pigeon fanciers eye moving up the pecking order

Opening one of his many cages, Michal Trojczak watches proudly as more than 70 dusty-blue pigeons take flight, soaring high above snow-covered fields in eastern Poland.

Text size:

"My birds are athletes," says the 42-year-old pigeon fancier, who inherited his passion for breeding the birds from his father and grandfather.

Poland boasts Europe's biggest community of homing pigeon breeders -- and a string of international competition trophies -- but trails other countries in the breeding of pedigree birds that command a higher value.

As one of those who has decided to do something about that, Trojczak said he had turned professional after retiring from the army a few years ago and teamed up with a friend.

Together, they bought Belgian pigeons with prestigious pedigrees, investing thousands of euros, including 11,000 euros ($12,400) alone for the progeny of a bird called Porsche 911.

"He's provided us with a lot of satisfaction and money," the ex-army captain tells AFP.

Now, he hopes the sky's the limit for Polish pigeon-enthusiasts who, he believes, will rise to rival their Belgian and Dutch counterparts within a decade.

- Birds of communication -

Pigeon lofts are a part of Poland's landscape especially in the mining region of Silesia, where pigeon breeding has historic roots and the birds enjoy near-mythic status.

After a day underground, it's still common to see miners emerge into the daylight, scanning the skies for their winged friends.

Released hundreds of kilometres (miles) from their pigeon lofts, the birds find their way home thanks to an ability to detect the earth's magnetic field and orient themselves according to the sun.

Flying with the wind, they can reach up to 120 kilometres (74 miles) per hour.

After Poland won back its independence in 1918, the use, breeding and racing of pigeons was regulated by the military affairs ministry due to the strategic importance of the birds' ability to carry communications.

The Nazis immediately banned pigeon breeding after occupying Poland in 1939, and enthusiasts were forced to start again from scratch after the war.

- Strength in numbers -

"With more than 40,000 members, we're the largest organisation of its kind in Europe, founded more than 100 years ago," said Krzysztof Kawaler, head of the Polish association of homing pigeon breeders.

France and Belgium -- where pigeon fancying has deep roots -- have around 11,000 and 13,000 breeders respectively, according to their associations.

"We take home the most prizes at international competitions," Kawaler told AFP at a trade fair in Katowice, in the heart of the Silesia region.

Those tournaments do not see the pigeons congregate in one place, as world athletes do at the Olympics.

Instead, every country holds its own local races in which the pigeons are equipped with electronic rings to record their flight time.

The results are calculated across the countries using coefficients that notably take into account the number of participating pigeons.

Since Poland has so many breeders, it helps boost its scores, according to Trojczak.

"But it doesn't reflect the pigeons' actual worth," he stresses, lamenting that Polish pigeon fanciers are still viewed as amateurs in Western Europe.

- Pecking order -

"On the Polish market, pigeons go for between 250 zlotys (around 55 euros) and four, five or even six thousand zlotys for those that participate in international tournaments," veteran breeder Zbigniew Oleksiak told AFP.

In Western Europe, however, prices start at around 200 euros but can go sky high, like the Belgian pigeon, Armando, which fetched 1.25 million euros at auction in 2019.

The buyer was Chinese, as was the proud new owner of New Kim, another Belgian bird which sold for 1.6 million euros the following year.

Like racehorses, it is the pedigree -- the bird's family tree -- that matters to buyers, especially those from Asia.

- Long hours -

For Trojczak, the days are long, especially in spring and summer.

"You have to train the pigeons to get them into shape, monitor their health, feed them well," he says.

"When you have to prep the birds for a race, sometimes I'll be up and running at 4:00 a.m. and won't finish till 9:00 p.m."

He now sells around 100 pigeons a year at prices ranging from 100 to 2,500 euros, which allows him to "live quite comfortably when combined with my military pension".

But it's not just a money-maker, pigeon breeding is above all a labour of love.

"I can trace each of my pigeons back three or four generations... I know their family trees better than my own," he says, laughing.

I.Mala--TPP