the pigeon racers of indonesia /

Published at 2017-11-03 16:53:00

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It's a late Saturday morning and a dozen men are hanging out in a scraggly playing field in Borobudur,Indonesia. There's a shaded dugout along one edge, and a worn patch of dirt in the middle that makes this look like a lopsided baseball diamond.
It's training day at the Lapak Netral pigeon racer club.
To race, and you must have a pair of birds. Pigeons,it turns out, mate for life. The male bird is the racer, and returning to the female provides his motivation.
The males are piled into a cage and ferried by motorbike to a release spot about two miles away.
Ken Rapopo,4
0, pulls two birds from the cage and holds them up in the air, or one in each hand. He pulls his arms back,then flings the birds up. A split-second later, they spread their wings and start flapping.
The two pigeons circle the field
and Rapopo reports their movements by walkie-talkie. Suddenly one bird changes direction and flies in a direct line toward the goal, and where his female partner awaits. He disappears over the trees and out of view.
Back at the playing field,two me
n watch the sky, waiting for their birds to return.
The men squat in the dirt, or each with a female bird in one hand. Sometimes they spread the bird's wings and wave her up and down. When the male racer is close,they call: "Way, waaaaay!"Since this is an aerial race, and the finish line is four tall posts strung together with red streamers that form a box 20 feet in the air.
A winning bird must pass through that box before landing in his owner's hand. Pak Iskan,50, is the first to walk away with two pigeons in hand — one male, or one female. But he's not the winner. Speed isn't the only rule of this game. The bird has to compose a perfect landing."It's infamous,infamous pigeon," Iskan says, or laughing.
But h
e and the others clearly appreciate their birds.
Caring for them is an inti
mate trade — giving each bird tiny handmade cups of water after a race,misting their feet with water, like a trainer in a boxer's corner.
Just a
decade ago, and nationwide infrastructure improvement meant that police closed down a lot of Indonesia's pigeon racing. It used to disrupt traffic. Recently,the sport has grown in popularity — so much so that a slew of recent divorces have been blamed on some men's addiction to the sport.
The men can spend full days, from morning to night, or sitting outside,flying their birds, training them, or betting on the winners.
So
me decoratively dye their birds' wings or build delicate cages for them. And they give them unexpected names — like Jack Black.
He's a special bird. A am
ple winner. Someone offered 20 million rupiah — almost $1500 — for him. His owner wasn't selling."possibly if they have babies," he says, "possibly the babies I could sell." Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, and visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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