President: Nigel Rigiani Chairman: Mike Shepherd Patron: Mark Gilbert BRITISH BARCELONA CLUB’S 50 ANNIVERSARY (Part 12). The Guernsey loft visits. Whilst convoying for the London & South East Classic Club for six seasons, I went to Guernsey 15 times with the young birds and managed to visit four of the premier lofts on the island. The short tour of these lofts featured two British Barcelona Club winners and I must say a big thank you to Albert Harley and Mattâ¦
Source: British Barcelona Club
President: Nigel Rigiani Chairman: Mike Shepherd
Patron: Mark Gilbert
BRITISH BARCELONA CLUB’S 50
ANNIVERSARY (Part 12).
The Guernsey loft visits.
Whilst convoying for the London & South East Classic Club for six seasons, I went to Guernsey 15
times with the young birds and managed to visit four of the premier lofts on the island. The short
tour of these lofts featured two British Barcelona Club winners and I must say a big thank you to
Albert Harley and Matt Bentley for their help while I was there.
Richard Mauger of St Sampsons.
open BBC Bordeaux (329 miles) 1997 / 1
open BBC Lamballe ( 69 miles) 2000 / 1
open BBC
Messac (119 miles) 2010.
My third loft visit on Guernsey was to the British Barcelona Club winning loft of Richard Mauger,
who won 1
open from Bordeaux in 1997. Richard also won 13
open in 1998, with the same
pigeon, his good blue hen, ‘Misty Lady’, who was sent to Bordeaux sitting 13 day old eggs. When
the great hen won in 1997 I was at Bordeaux with the London & South East Classic Club birds and
there were no day birds recorded in mainland England on the day of liberation, in either club. ‘Misty
Lady’ was bred by Fred Hall of Brighton, the 1998 NFC Pau Grand National winner, and she was
bred from the Jackson & Andrews family.
Richard started racing 20 years ago, but always had pigeons as pets when he was a lad. He is only
interested in long distance races, flying cocks and hens natural, and has won many major prizes
racing with the British Barcelona Club. He has 24 pairs of racers, which are trained from Jersey and
St Malo, and pairs up in late February. The old birds
get two French races on their build-up and are then sent to Barcelona (601 miles), preferably sitting
12 days; the yearlings go to Bordeaux and sometimes Pau. The racing loft has three sections, open-
door trapping, grille floors and Richard favours widowhood-type nest boxes. The main family kept is
De1bar, which he has had for 20 years, and he
brings in the odd cross now and again. Richard's son Paul is an outstanding fancier in his own right,
having won 1
open British Barcelona Club twice, the Rennes young bird race in 1996 and the
Fougeres young bird race in 2010. The Mauger family on Guernsey has won the British Barcelona
Club five times!
Bryan Ket of Vale.
open BBC Palamos (590 miles) 1999.
In 1999 Bryan won 1
open Palamos, the blue riband race of the British Barcelona Club, and my
good friend Albert Harley subsequently set up this loft visit for me. Bryan's self-built loft has real
character, being set amongst some mature trees on the picturesque coastline of Guernsey. This loft
has two sections, one 12ft section for old bird racers and a 4ft section for his young bird team. It is
100% geared to long-distance racing, which is all Bryan is interested in. He flies only natural and
seclusion and contentment are the name of the game in his garden loft. All 24 nest boxes in his old
bird section are closed in, giving the birds total peace. His wonderful old loft is painted white, set
against a dark background of trees, and all trapping is through sputniks.
The highlight of the visit was when he showed us his 1999 British Barcelona Club Palamos National
winner, ‘Amazing Grace’. This game hen is a touch of pure class. She is medium, apple-bodied in
the hand with silky feathering and is bred from Ponderosa UK Stud Jan Aarden stock. When this
wonderful champion won the Palamos National (590 miles) she was sent sitting 10 day old eggs.
The British Barcelona Club liberated into a north-west wind and this game pigeon was clocked at
16.16hrs with no birds being recorded in mainland England until next day. Champion ‘Amazing
Grace’ has always been raced entirely on the natural system and had won previously. In 1998 she
was 3
club Palamos, 1
club Nantes, 1
club St Malo as a young bird and has flown Pau (436
miles). A wonderful hen! Bryan started racing pigeons in 1978, although he has kept them most of
his life. He has won many premier prizes from the long distance races throughout the years, a recent
success being in 1998 when he was 1
st,
, 3
club Palamos; 1
and 2
club Bergerac (350 miles),
only two birds on the day in the club; 1997 – 1
, 2
, 3
club Bergerac, only three birds on the day in
the club; a brilliant performance!
As I stated previously, Bryan's whole management is geared to long distance natural
racing and he pairs up his 20 pairs of racers on 14
February, if the weather is good. He can't train
any more than about eight or nine miles in Guernsey, so all training is over the water, from Jersey,
Sark and Alderney, which means great losses. He maintains that training from the other islands is
very difficult and, if the weather turns adverse or the wind is against them, the pigeons tend to go off
into France and find it very difficult getting back onto the island. The typical preparation for the
Palamos National is lots of training from the other Channel Islands and then two races, one from St
Malo (61 miles) and one from Nantes (161 miles). The birds are fed on Willsbridge Popular Mixture,
with peanuts being added to put soft fat on the birds for the longer races. The main family at the Kett
loft is Ponderosa Jan Aarden, obtained from an auction on the island a few years
ago, and he only keeps four pairs of stock birds. He dislikes deep pigeons, going for those which are
shallow in the hand, and is not bothered about their eyesign but insists on good, silky feather. On our
very enjoyable visit to Bryan's loft he showed us several of his top racers, including the handsome
dark chequered Jan Aarden cock which had 1
club Bordeaux in 1999 and this cock was also raced
to eggs on the natural system.
Bryan races his 30 young birds naturally to the perch and trains them to Jersey, 21 miles over the
sea. They race from St Malo and Rennes (101 miles) and Bryan maintains the losses are really bad in
all Channel races. He says that, if the wind is in the wrong direction from Rennes, the birds seem to
go right past Guernsey and cross the Channel to mainland England with the British pigeons. I must
say that, to me, Guernsey seems to be one of the hardest places in the world to race pigeons and only
quality fanciers and pigeons reign supreme. I think Bryan is one of them. His record through the
years from long-distance racing has been second to none and was topped in 1999 by his winning the
BBC Palamos National. I hope you've enjoyed your insight into racing on the island of Guernsey. It's
a hard old game over there!

