Saturday 3 August 2013

What to Feed Your Pigeons

It is important to know how a racing (feeding) plan is developed and why. Besides that it is important to know which and how much energy a pigeon uses. Pigeons are top athletes and we have to treat them appropriately.
Just like human athletes we have to know: when to feed carbohydrates, when to feed protein, when to add fatty acids to the diet. After the question is: which carbohydrates, which proteins and which fatty acids, in order to achieve top race results. It is in these areas that many fanciers make mistakes and there is a lot of room for improvement.
Pigeon fanciers learn about the care of their pigeons during the breeding season, the winter, the race season and the moulting season. Which vitamins should we use and why, which by-products and why, how fatty acids are used, the amount of feed to give at the right time to influence success etc. 
 
•All new discoveries for your pigeon that your competitors do not know (take your benefit!)
•How much energy a pigeon uses while racing?
•When to use carbohydrates, when to use protein, when to use fatty acids
•Which carbohydrates, which proteins, and which fatty acids to use in order to get optimal results? (Much can be done to improve your pigeon’s diet)
•How to better care for your pigeons during, the moult, during the winter, and while breeding?
•You will learn about products by which you should and should not be used and why.
•How to adjust your feeds so that your pigeons stay healthier and perform better?
•How the digestive system works in pigeons?
•What the function of minerals and trace elements are?
•You will learn about by products and how they take and why.
•What the function of minerals and trace elements are?
•How a racing (feeding) plan is developed and why. Besides that it is important to know which and how much energy a pigeon uses.
•All you need to know if you want to fly with young racing pigeons.
•A fancier who takes the advice to heart will see results quite quickly. That could be as soon as 2 to 3 weeks.
Bird lovers will love what they will learn from this info.....