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Pigeon shooter finds fuss frightening, but he keeps on shooting

September 10, 1990

The Morning Call (Allentown, PA)

By George Smith

Dave X is in his mid-30s. He participates regularly in pigeon-shooting matches and has done so since he graduated from high school in the early 1970s. And he is not alone in the sleepy, insular community of Pine Grove, located in the southwest end of Schuylkill County.

Dave’s friends join him in matches. Another acquaintance, a teacher in the school where Dave works, shoots. Dave’s summer boss in the construction company he moonlights for, shoots, too.

“Every town in Schuylkill County, just about, has pigeon-shooting matches,” said the shooter in a recent interview.

“That’s why this fuss is frightening.”

Dave is referring to the storm of outrage and controversy surrounding the annual Labor Day Fred Coleman Memorial Pigeon Shoot in Hegins, an event which looked very ugly in the aftermath of opprobrious spectacles like the brandishing of decapitated pigeons, dieing birds falling from trees onto the backs of spectators, fisticuffs, arrests and general fear and loathing among patrons and protesters last Monday.

And he’s asked to remain anonymous because pigeon shooting in Schuylkill County is “like family, a close-knit group. They’d hang me around here if anyone found out who told you this.

“I like it. I’m 100 percent for it,” he continued. “But I don’t have any answers why.

I enjoy the matches for the camaraderie, the good fellowship. When all is said and done at the shoots, everyone has a beer.”

What does Dave think is one of the facets of the shoot that riles animal cruelty activists the most?

“The shoots are…Well, you have bird-catchers – kids who retrieve the birds that are winged and they tear the heads off them. It’s …,” his voice trailed off.

If public pressure continues, Dave said that pigeon shooting would probably be outlawed. “But if that happens, I think there will still be shoots in Schuylkill County. Know what I mean?

“My friends and I are going to the Coleman shoot and try to have a good time. (This interview was conducted the week before the Labor Day shoot.) But it’s become too sensitive.

There’s a guy (Steve Hindi) who wants to get in fistfights. (He did.) The understanding in the pigeon-shooting community is “Don’t get belligerent.” (They were.)

“But there will be people drinking alcohol and when you have that, anything can happen.”

Dave started shooting pigeons in competition shortly after high school when he and a friend matched kills for a case of beer. “It was just a dumb…kind of thing.”

Six years ago, he became very serious about “the sport.”

He and one of his partners in pigeon shooting purchased a shotgun, which they modified so that it was a better weapon for the shoots. “We altered it so the pattern spreads out better,” he said.

He also received a “trap” – the small box from which the target pigeons are released – from another pigeon-shooting friend. Sometimes he would see competitors using a long branch to agitate the birds in the boxes, “polishing” them so that they would – theoretically – be conditioned to burst into flight more rapidly once the trap was opened.

Dave began winning matches more frequently. At about the same time, animal rights activists were starting a media campaign to put pressure on the state to impose sanctions on the shooters.

Informal “lecturers” began giving talks at local rod-and-gun clubs, supplying their rationale for the shoots.

“I heard one guy give a talk on how the shoots were necessary because if the pigeons weren’t used in this way, the flyers (those who fly and raise pigeons for racing and/or shooting matches) and breeders wouldn’t be able to control the population and there would be an excess of pigeons s--- on roofs. That was neither here nor there.”

The development of shooting skills, “an eye” Dave called it, as another justification is, for him, “secondary.”

Competitors in pigeon shoots get very involved, said Dave. “There are the shooting clubs and the flyers. The flyers set up the matches between clubs.

“I’ve seen some flyers who have a special pigeon. They’ll put it in the trap and pass you and say, ‘Well, you’re going to miss him.’

“And then the bird is hit. I’ve seen some flyers cry when that happens, the bird meant that much to them.”

Then why do they do it? Why kill a special bird?

“I don’t know,” said Dave.

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