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The Fascinating Saga of the World's Most Revered and Reviled Bird
by Andrew D. BlechmanIntroduction: Pigeonholed
Some days youre the pigeon. Some days youre
the statue. - Anonymous
For much of my life, I didnt have a strong opinion
about pigeons. At best, I found their incessant bobbing
and waddling mildly charming to watch as I walked
through the streets of New York City. It was my college
girlfriend who first alerted me to their nefarious lack of
hygiene. They may look harmless, she informed me, but
theyre actually insidious carriers of hidden filth - rats
with wings - that eat garbage off the streets and crap in
their own nests.
Lamenting the citys lack of wildlife, I hung a bird
feeder from the fire escape outside my barred windows in
an effort to attract songbirds to my apartment. The feeder
didnt attract robins or cardinals, but it was popular with
pigeons. They flocked to my fire escape, landing in friendly,
cooing clusters. They were animated, fun to watch, and
they kept me company as I looked out onto an otherwise
drab urban vista.
A few days later, I noticed my superintendent standing
on the sidewalk contemplating the sudden rise in bird
droppings around the buildings entrance. I suspected I was
in trouble when he looked up at my window and spied the
bird feeder. He bounded up the fire escape, gave me a look
of enraged incredulity, and promptly pitched my feeder
onto the sidewalk below, where it exploded into a cloud of
birdseed shrapnel. My nature experiment was clearly over.
Months after, I got a taste of pigeon prejudice firsthand.
I was interviewing for a job outside Rockefeller
Center when I felt a splat on my head and then, seconds
later, several oozy drips down my ear and onto my freshly
pressed white shirt. I was at a complete loss, too embarrassed
to survey the damage. Could I just pretend it had
never happened?
I sat there motionless, unsure what to do, and keenly
aware of everyone else around me. It was as if the whole
plaza had suddenly gone silent, all eyes focused on me -
the crap-covered stooge. I reached for a napkin, but we
were eating falafel sandwiches, and mine was already covered
in tahini. My interviewer looked at me in stunned silence,
face frozen in horror, eyes fixated on the gooey mess.
Oh, my, he managed. Oh, my.
Then I met José Martinez. It was a dreary day, the
sidewalks covered in graying slush. I was waiting in line at
the corner bodega to pay for a tuna sandwich when I struck
up a conversation with the man next in line. I have no idea
how we started talking about pigeons, but this was New
York City, after all, where pigeons are not an altogether
unusual topic of discussion. He told me about his brother
Orlandos loft of racing pigeons.
Racing pigeons? I asked. Did he mean like the
scruffy pigeons in the street that crap all over the citys
buildings? Had I misunderstood him? People dont race
birds - do they?
My brothers pigeons are like thoroughbreds, José
replied. Pigeon thoroughbreds? The following day, armed
with a pen and notebook, I journeyed to Orlandos home
in Brooklyn to meet the pigeon man myself.
Alternating between enthusiasm for my project and
frustration with my seemingly endless stupid questions,
Josés brother nonetheless opened up his pigeon-centric
world to me. I spent a year with Orlando, tagging along with
him to the very first stirrings of a new racing season and all
the way to one of the biggest races of the year. The Bronxbased
Main Event is the Kentucky Derby of the New York
pigeon-racing community. At stake is over $15,000 in prize
money for the first-place finisher (plus tens of thousands
more in side bets) and a years worth of bragging rights for
winning one of the metro areas most competitive races.
Orlando put it to me this way: To walk into your
racing club, knowing that your bird beat out a thousand
others because you put in the time, bred it right, fed it
right, and trained it right, well, few things compare.
But the Main Event was nearly a year off. First
Orlando would spend an anxious year earnestly preparing
for the big race. Orlando had won it once before, and
consequently, he had a lot at stake this time around, including
his cocky reputation.
Excerpted from Pigeons © 2006 by Andrew Blechman, and reprinted with the permission of the publisher, Grove Press.
We must believe in luck. For how else can we explain the success of those we don't like?
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