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2008 Aggregate
Winner
John Dismore

John holding his 2008 500 Mile Fed Winner
John started racing
pigeons in London as soon as he left school
and had luck right from the beginning,
winning the Federation in his second race.
The nest mate to that winner went on to be a
fantastic racer winning right up to and
including races when he was 6 years old! He
soon found out that old pigeons of that age
don’t win here. His first family of birds
was a sprint family that were only effective
up to 300 miles. These were then replaced
with a family that would win from 60 to 600
miles. With those birds he was fortunate
enough to win the Fed from 600 miles and the
500 mile Federation for two years running
prior to leaving England. Also being the
runner up in the famous Tommy Long trophy
which was basically the championship of the
whole Greater London which has a population
approximately the same as the whole of
Australia.
John has found that racing is different in
Australia in that here the flyers race
mostly younger pigeons as against mostly
widowhood cocks like Europe. The caring for
the birds is the same using basic animal
husbandry principles. In fact the same basic
methods are being used by John today as he
used in the 1960’s in the UK and these same
methods allowed him to win the old bird
aggregate the first year that he flew here
in Australia.
2008 has turned out to be another good year
for John having won the Old Bird Aggregate
with a record number of points beating the
previous record by over 60 points. He
managed to take a fed spot in 19 of the 20
races, eleven of those being in the top four
of the fed.
His birds are mostly Desmet Matthys, Janssen
Van Loons with some Dordins and recently
added Wickham blood from Robbie Taylor that
has been very successful for him. Another
successful recent addition is some Janssen
and Janssen Van Loons from Germany that are
direct from Wouters birds. Any of you that
have read the Janssens book will know
Wouters purchased many of the Janssen
champions directly from them and flew
himself with fantastic results.
John’s 500 mile Fed winner last year is a
grand-daughter of his No 1 Desmet Matthys
cock. He has been a fantastic breeder for
John - as well as breeding 10 birds in the
top 10 of the Federation himself, he is now
the grandsire of 10 Federation winners.
In Australia, John has found that you need
fast developing birds as most of the birds
only race in the first of second year of
their life. Although most of his birds are
European birds, he feels at the distance,
the Aussie birds are equal to any in the
world, and a cross between the two has been
very successful.
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