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Pigeon fancier in Pakistan

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The life of a racing pigeon in Pakistan: massages, steroids and the occasional Viagra


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Raja Iftikhar Ahmed breeds rare pigeons on his farm in Jhelum, Pakistan.
(Shashank Bengali / Los Angeles Times)
By SHASHANK BENGALI


Outside an old farmhouse nestled among green fields, two men lay on a cot. With their feet propped against a teal-painted wall, they stared at a sky speckled with clouds, occasionally pointing upward and aiming a pair of binoculars.

The dark figure of a bird would suddenly be visible at a great height, gliding across the heavens, then flying out of view just as swiftly as it had appeared.

Bird watching is no idle exercise in these parts of Pakistan. Aloft that afternoon was a rare breed of racing pigeon worth hundreds of dollars – more than either man observing it earned in a month.

The pigeon is part of a stable of prized high-fliers belonging to Raja Iftikhar Ahmed, a businessman whose farm on the placid Jhelum River has become a rearing ground for big-time birds.


More than 300 of the winged specimens flap and flutter inside a series of custom-built, walk-in coops on the roof of Iftikhar’s farmhouse. Tall and broad-shouldered, with an enviably thick mustache, Iftikhar welcomed a visitor into the enclosure, its royal blue paint spattered with droppings.

“To your eyes they look like normal pigeons,” he said, pulling down one bird with a gray-blue crown and white feathers. He held it by the claws and lifted a wing to reveal a deep streak of indigo dye, applied as a sort of marathoner’s bib for the endurance races popular here.

People train pigeons all over the world – there are believed to be thousands of “pigeon fanciers” across the United States – but in Pakistan the niche pursuit boasts a particularly rich history. In the Mughal era, beginning in the 16th century, legend has it that carrier pigeons carried secret messages from royals to their men on the battlefield, or to their women in harems.

Nowadays, pigeon breeding, or kabootar parwar, is more of a hobby, though a serious one for men like Iftikhar. In the endurance races popular here, pigeon enthusiasts train their birds to stay aloft for as long as possible – usually for more than 12 hours at a stretch – before returning home.





There is no starting line: all the birds in a competition take off at the appointed time from their own perches, often many miles apart. The breeders watch from the ground with binoculars, but often the pigeons are out of sight. The moment one returns to its perch, the clock stops; landing anywhere else can mean disqualification – if the bird is caught.

Judges circulate among the breeders and perform spot checks, but the competitions are based largely on the honor system. Each pigeon wears a silicon band around one leg with its owner’s phone number, to help track strays.

“They are trained not to land anywhere else,” Iftikhar said. “This is a matter of respect for our sport.”

Three times, he has won an annual tournament here in the eastern province of Punjab. Five years ago he was runner-up in an international competition hosted by the United Arab Emirates, when his birds flew for a combined 1,082 hours over 11 days.




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Pakistani racing pigeons are fed nuts, grains and sometimes steroids to help them fly longer.
(Shashank Bengali / Los Angeles Times )

Once someone asked Iftikhar to part with one of his best fliers, a blue-headed female Sialkot pigeon named Topiwali (“the one with the cap”), in exchange for a new Toyota sedan. Iftikhar declined.

“This is more than a game for us,” he said. “It’s a tradition.”

Iftikhar, 44, learned the pastime from his father, who picked it up while working for a royal family in the Persian Gulf. When Iftikhar moved to Britain about two decades ago, he tried to breed pigeons on the roof of his home outside London, but he found the wet, gray conditions less than ideal.


His flock seems to do better on the rooftop in Jhelum, a farming area two hours outside Islamabad. On Iftikhar’s 10 acres of land, where he grows wheat and raises cattle, a staff of several men rotate through the farmhouse to tend to the coop or let the birds out for practice runs.

The afternoon before a recent race, his best birds – including three that he said were gifts to him from Bahraini royalty – were resting inside the wire enclosure under a hand-painted sign that read, “Alhamdulillah,” or “Praise be to Allah.” Later, as part of the pre-race routine, they would have their wings massaged.

This is more than a game for us. It is a tradition.

PAKISTANI PIGEON ENTHUSIAST RAJU IFTIKHAR AHMED

Downstairs, an elderly man in a fraying white kurta ground up food for the birds in a large pot. Here was the secret of a successful pigeon breeder, Iftikhar said: If you fed the birds well, they could fly for hours and hours without feeling fatigue.


He was circumspect about the exact composition of his prize-winning formula, but it was a mixture of gram, millet, almonds, cardamom, herbs and, at times, enhancers that have been banned from other sports.

Unlocking a metal cabinet, he pulled out a sheet of white tablets that he said were steroid pills. They would be ground up into the mixture, which would be shaped into pellets the width of an index finger and fed to the birds.

“The steroids keep them from getting thirsty, so they can fly for 10 or 12 hours,” he explained. “It’s allowed. So are muscle relaxers. You can do anything you want in this sport, really. I’ve even fed the pigeons Viagra.”

Iftikhar allowed that to settle in for a moment, then broke into a grin – a subtle acknowledgement that the diet might not exactly be healthy for the birds. Pakistan doesn’t have much of an animal rights movement, but a constituency closer to home fervently opposes Iftikhar’s peculiar, expensive hobby.


“My wife hates it,” he said with a laugh.


shashank.bengali@latimes.com

Follow @SBengali on Twitter
 
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Competitions begin around the crack of dawn. Birds are released from rooftops, and they climb high into the sky, till they are mere specks, watched carefully through binoculars by handlers from opposing teams. The pigeons can circle the sky for up to 15 hours, though a free-willed bird might return in a few minutes, embarrassing the owner. The rules of the competition stipulate that the pigeon must remain visible throughout its flight, while landing even an inch outside the boundary of the roof results in disqualification. A tournament typically lasts 14 days, with flights on seven of these days. Flight times are tallied at the end of a tournament to determine the best flier. Ahmad’s pigeons have remained uncontested champions at the Punjab level competitions for the past ten years.

Between June and July last year, Azeem had discovered an exceptional flier in a batch he helped rear. The bird was two years old and had a long flying life ahead of it—a healthy bird can live for around 15 years, according to Azeem. It had shown great promise in training, but one day it failed to return home after a training flight. By sundown, Azeem had accepted the loss of a potential champion.

The next day, the family received a phone call from across the border, from Punjab in India. “A Sardarji called us,” Azeem said. “He asked if the pigeon was ours.” The man, Azeem explained, had found Azeem’s cousin’s number on the bird’s tail, stamped in ink. “When my cousin said that it belongs to Mian sahib, the Sardarji was very happy,” Azeem said. “He had heard of Mian sahib. He offered to bring the bird to the border to return it to us.” But Azeem’s cousin told the man to keep the pigeon and breed it for future fliers. “When the chicks hatch,” he said, “they will be excellent fliers. It will make you happy.”
 
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