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President: Nigel Rigiani Chairman: Mike Shepherd Patron: Mark Gilbert BRITISH BARCELONA CLUB’S 50 ANNIVERSARY (Part 16). Joe & Helen Deville of Camberley. open BBC Rennes (228 miles) 1998. It always pleases me to see one the sports worker enjoy so good success with his pigeons and I was highly delighted to see Joe Deville win the last L&SECC young bird race from Vire. Joe visited my home in Claygate two weeks after his Classic win to have his champion hen…

Source: British Barcelona Club

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President: Nigel Rigiani Chairman: Mike Shepherd

Patron: Mark Gilbert

BRITISH BARCELONA CLUB’S 50

ANNIVERSARY (Part 16).

Joe & Helen Deville of Camberley.

open BBC Rennes (228 miles) 1998.

It always pleases me to see one the sports worker enjoy so good success with his pigeons and I was

highly delighted to see Joe Deville win the last L&SECC young bird race from Vire. Joe visited my

home in Claygate two weeks after his Classic win to have his champion hen photographed and told

me he had had a golden young bird season, which finished up with him recording his fourth

L&SECC winner. Joe said on his visit, ‘the young birds were pretty average for the first three weeks

of the season, not winning very much apart from a few club prize, but on the fourth Saturday they hit

brilliant form winning the last five races and on the last three weekends won 1

Berkshire Federation

Exeter, 1

, 2

, 5

Berkshire Federation Kingsdown, 1

, 2

Berkshire Federation Wincanton and 1

open L&SECC Young Bird Vire (2). On the last Saturday we won the Berkshire Federation and the

L&SECC on the same day’. A fantastic three weeks for the Camberley loft!

The final race of the 2012 season for the London and South East Classic Club took place from Vire,

in northern France and the birds were liberated at 08.30hrs into a light variable wind. A good steady

race was expected and judging by the majority of the fanciers spoken too most had excellent returns.

It was to be another game of chess, with anticipated easterly winds in France forecasted and before

we had even put a pigeon in the basket we all thought it was going to be a hard job. Although the

Saturday was predicted to be a good day, the worry was the east wind at the liberation site, but on

the day every thing turned out good and the membership enjoyed one of the best races of the season.

A great end to the 2012 young bird Classic season, with our members enjoying a great race with

good returns! Joe had a brilliant race by sending ten birds and clocked nine! His Young Bird Classic

winner was his blue hen, ‘Dame Kelly Holmes’, sent sitting 12 day old eggs and was bred from his

family of ‘TOWIE’ / Huybregts obtained from his brother, John Deville of Essex. This game little

hen won a couple of prizes in the Saturday club and being sent to the first L&SECC Vire race in

August, she made hard work of it, but this set her up for her Classic win in September. Her sire won

the Federation this year and the dam won 2

open Combine from Poitiers. Joe was so impressed

with John’s family of ‘TOWIE’ pigeons he obtained some to try in 2011 and they have hit in to his

own family of Jan Huybregts straight away. They are winning out of turn from their introduction and

have topped the Federation, with one hen recorded 2

Combine for Joe, with it being beaten by a

loft mate.

Joe normally breeds him self 40 young birds to race each season and these are all put on the

‘darkness’ system. When I asked Joe about his young bird system, he said, ‘it is pretty basic, with

the youngster being on the light for office hours, 9am to 5pm and are started on the ‘dark’ at the end

of March, and come off the system the second week in June. They are exercised around the loft for

three weeks after coming off the ‘dark’ so they can adjust to the normal day light and then they start

training at ten miles. I give them lots of tosses, working down the line to 25 miles and they are kept

at that point until the first race, which is with the Federation. The babies race the programme and I

still give them a mid-week training toss during the racing season. I like them to pair up, although I

don’t purposely pair them up, as I think this is a bit of an incentive for the young racers, especially

on the longer races at the back end of the season. I feed the youngster on ‘Arrow’ mixture, which is a

fat diet, which I think is important if the birds are putting work in on the road and I don’t like to see

youngsters broken down. When they come home from the race they eat as much as they want and

from Tuesday until marking night I hand feed the youngsters. As I have already stated my young

bird system is basic, but for good results with youngsters they must go on the ‘dark’ system’.

Joe’s racing loft is a self built 16ft x 8ft structure, with drop board trapping for his ETS clocking and

during the breeding season he uses Tesco’s finest cat litter on the floors to keep then dry. The old

birds are raced on the roundabout system, being mated up in late January and the hens kept on poles,

and are housed in a different loft. At the beginning of the year the racers rear a pair of youngsters

and the hens are taken away, with the cocks being left to finish the rearing in the race loft. Joe uses

the roundabout system while training the old birds and he tells me he likes the middle distance

channel racing best. Joe has about sixteen pairs of stock birds and these are paired up just before

Christmas. The stock birds are all bred from direct Jan Huybregts and some were bred by Alan

Ingleton of ‘Oak Villa’ Lofts, who was one of the first fanciers to bring the Huybregts into the UK.

Joe says, he and brother, John have obtained the very best of the Jan Huybregts and they have

produced some wonderful results. When I asked Joe what he looked for when bringing in a new

stock bird he replied, ‘first of all it has to be a good Jan Huybregts bloodline, but having said that it

has to conform to what like. I like a real good handling pigeon and it has to have the right type of

eye. I don’t do the eye sign method, but it must have the rich eye I require. I don’t buy to pedigree; I

buy to the type I like. I have seen well bred Huybregts in the past that are not my type, so I would

not entertain them, but if they are what is right in my mind, they will be introduced in to my stock

loft’.

He first had pigeons when he was a young lad and first member of the Deville family to introduce

them into the Hillingdon garden was his brother, ‘Dodger’. The brother flew north road with some

great fanciers in the Heathrow Airport area and he introduced the young Joe to the late great Ken

Hine of West Drayton. Joe started racing on his own at the age of eighteen, when he got his own

place in West Drayton and the first birds were from Tom, Dick and Harry. Joe’s brother was a very

good racer on the north road and won the Federation out of Thurso two years on the trot. Joe told me

that Ken Hine was the top fancier in the area then and although in recent times he is famous for his

great performances on the long distance in the Pau Grand National, in those days he raced north road

and competed from 80 miles through to 600 miles. Joe says, Ken was a great man and pigeon

fancier! He was Joe’s mentor and gave him so much help in the early days. Joe’s first club was the

Yiewsley HS and won his first race from Leicester, with a Derek Smith of Great Ayton young bird.

Joe was one of the first members of the London & South East Classic Club and won the Classic’s

first two races from Sartilly and Nantes in 1987. He tells me his first his first two Classic winners

were both ‘Tom, Dick and Harry’ strain! Joe was very successful for many years with different

families in his loft, but says he would never go back to that way and for many years has only kept

one successful family of pigeons.

Joe lived in Sandhurst for several years and at that time raced in the Central Southern Classic Flying

Club and came close to winning it on a couple of occasions and won 1

open British Barcelona Club

Young Bird Rennes in the 1998 season. On moving out of Sandhurst in 2004 he had to pack up the

pigeons for a brief time and his good friends, Dick Trussler and Peter Sabba looked after his stock

birds for him so he could restart when he got relocated. Joe mover into his Camberley address in

2007 and started racing with young birds that year. He is a four times winner of the L&SECC and

last won in 2007, when he recorded 1

open young bird Guernsey (1715 birds) with one of his

Huybregts. The Deville loft has won 1

Combine three times in the last four seasons, including 1

and 2

Combine Poitiers in 2012. A fantastic racing record! He is a great worker for our sport,

running the L&SECC Sunningdale clock station and is the secretary of his local club at Sunningdale.

Joe runs a clock station for the NFC and BBC, and was the secretary of the Berkshire Federation for

a number of years.

Joe has a big problem with Sparrowhawks where he lives and has had many pigeons killed by them.

He has tried every thing to try and keep them out of the garden and has found nothing works, apart

from exercising the birds around the loft at different times of the day. He maintain that if you let the

birds out at say 10.00hrs regular every day the hawk will get dialled in and turn up to attack at that

time every day. He has found if he lets the birds out of the loft for exercise at different times each

day the attacks have reduced considerably. Joe’s wife, Helen, is interested in the pigeons and tells

me jokingly, she is the person who answers the telephone when he is in the pigeon loft most of the

day! Joe has a great admiration for the late Ken Hine and says it a shame their not more fanciers like

him, as he was a wonderful worker and pigeon racer. There you have it, the Joe Deville story!

TEXT & PHOTOS BY KEITH MOTT ( www.keithmott.com)

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