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Sent: Monday 10/10/2005 10:51 PM
No two droppers are the same and they react differently to many
variables, those being: your loft design, flying position,
training of tipplers, training of droppers, the Tippler type you
keep, even color, feeding method and more I'm sure.
The type of dropper you need largely depends on above variables
but more importantly the type of Tippler you fly. Do you need
them to go up and fetch the kit or do they need to just flutter
about? How many?…depends again on your type of Tippler. Some
only need one or two and others an entire team…10 plus. My
advice….do not have more or less than you need and more
importantly…know what you need.
Hughes birds probably need more active droppers while Zovich
less. I use 8…and they only need to flutter to create the
pull…droppers flying with the kit is not required as the kit
drops with a flutter. But, I have 8 because my loft is next to
my house…the temptation being great just to plop on the house
roof. This year however all dropped to the loft…why?…the
numbers…they felt more confident coming to the loft with that
many fluttering about. We all fly and learn.
If you fly in competition droppers are a must…some have done
without but I believe this is the long way home if you get my
drift. Discipline is stronger and easier with droppers.
I make sure that my droppers know the rules before young or old
are let out. I have a stick that I use to maneuver the droppers
and keep them active. When I carry the stick they are alert and
suspicious, but without, they literally don't care one bit how
close I come.
I do not starve them at all but do not feed them on the night
before the training fly, very little if I do. Don't want to
break them down, and you can if you continue to keep them in a
starving state…experience is a good teacher.
I think all droppers should be dark trained regardless if you
fly into the dark. There will be a time when the birds go longer
than you expect. This will also force you to set up proper
lighting just in case…you fly and you learn.
I do not throw the droppers when the kit shows first sign of
coming down…meaning they are dictating the time…instead, I wait
until they pass and thus learning dropping is on my terms not
theirs. If the kit knows they will get the signal every time
they are tired and lower they are the masters, not you. I have
flown Tipplers on sheer guts almost an hour after they were
ready…or were they? A few minutes of extra discipline may mean
the difference between a record and a personal best or a DQ.
Who's the boss…them or you??
Also, I never throw droppers upon kit approaching…I wait until
the kit passes …why?…again, I determine when they land…if they
are certain that the droppers will be deployed upon decent or
approach they will learn quickly to force the release.
They (droppers) should never (within reason) land on any other
roof than loft. If they do and make this a habit they have to
go, no matter their looks. If you don't train the droppers
properly you will never train the Tipplers effectively either.
I treat the Tipplers and the Droppers the same in feeding and
general care. Each depends on the other for success. All are
equal.
I try to wear the same hat or coat when dropping the kit.
Familiarity is security.
There are many other little perks and tricks…but your own
experience with your birds, flying position and training
preference will teach you far more then these words.
Luka
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