Windsor pigeon racers set to mark the 2022 season, bringing birds as far as 600 km away - Action News
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Windsor pigeon racers set to mark the 2022 season, bringing birds as far as 600 km away

Carlo Bertolissio, Robbie Taylorand their birds are getting ready for a busy pigeon racing season, set to start this weekend in southwestern Ontario.

No one seems to know how pigeons find their way back home, say enthusiasts

Carlo Bertolissio, left, and Robbie Taylor, right, are gearing up for another year of racing their pigeons. The birds are driven as far as 630 km away, and somehow find their way back home. (CBC)

Carlo Bertolissioand his birds are getting ready for a busy pigeon race season, set to start this weekend in southwestern Ontario.

The Windsoritekeeps pigeon coops in his backyard a hobby he's enjoyed since he was a kid.

"At that time, when Iwas in grade school, half the guys in class had pigeons it was just the way it was ... every second house had a pigeon loft," said Bertolissio.

"It's a sport that requires a lot of work, and it requires a lot of ambition."

Bertolissiois also part oftheWindsor Racing Pigeon Club,which has a long history in the city, dating back to1927.

While the group has dwindled over the years to only about 15 current members, they still look forward the the racing season each year.

WATCH | Windsor pigeon racer explains the sport and caring for his birds:

Windsor racing pigeon season about to take off

2 years ago
Duration 2:26
Carlo Bertolissio has been racing pigeons for over three decades but he's still passionate about the sport.

Bertolissioand his fellow racers will drop off their pigeons at the Windsor Sportsmen's Club this weekend. From there, someone will drive the birds kilometres away.The races happen incrementally throughout the summer starting at 150 kilometres away from Windsor.

Using their natural homing abilities, the birds find their way home from as far away as 600 kilometres when competing in the races.

Bertolissio said some people can be critical of the sport, but he said birds are free to leave whenever but most choose to return to their coops.

"They're released every morning and every night to exercise, and they're free to go," he says, explaining the birds usually go to fields during the day.

"They stay on their own free will."

Taylor holds one of his pigeons in his coop in Amherstburg. (Submitted by Robbie Taylor)

Robbie Taylor of Amherstburg, Ont.,has also enjoyed the sport after learning from his uncle how to raise the birds.

"I started flying with him back in 2009," he said, adding that he also got his girlfriend interested in pigeon racing.

Taylor also finds it amazing how the birds are able to make their way back home.

"No one really knows [how]," he said. "Some people say the sun, some people say they have a magnetic field but no one really knows."

Taylor said the birds are gradually brought farther and farther away from home as part of preparing them to race.

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