^A^ EASY START 35 



At the start, the problem of breeding squabs for market 

 is in your favor, because one hundred pairs of breeding 

 pigeons may be handled as easily and as rapidly as one pair. 

 Try to keep this numerical advantage in your favor all the 

 time. Discard every plan that cuts down the efficiency of 

 your own labor, and adopt every device that will give you 

 control in the same time over a greater number of pigeons. 



It takes brains and skilled labor to run a poultry plant 

 successfully. Every poultryman knows that he cannot 

 entrust the regulation of temperatures of incubators and 

 brooders to an ignorant hired man, but even a boy or girl, or 

 under-the-average farm hand, knows enough to fill up the 

 bath pans and feeding troughs for squab -breeders, leaving 

 the time of the owner free for correspondence and the more 

 skilful work. 



The primary object is to breed squabs for market as cheaply, 

 as easily and as fast as possible, without the expenditure of a 

 dollar for fanciful or impractical appurtenances. 



Do not think it is necessary to heat your squab house. A 

 squab house which has the chill of dampness taken off it by 

 hot water or steam pipes will raise more squabs than a house 

 not heated, but a flock of pigeons in a small house throw off 

 considerable heat from their bodies and will breed in cold 

 weather all right. After you have developed your plant and . 

 have a large business which you wish to keep at the highest 

 state of efficiency, you may heat your squab house. The idea 

 of heat in winter time is to keep the birds more contented and 

 get more squabs out of them, and not at all to keep them 

 alive. Do not be afraid that your pigeons will freeze to 

 death. We have many customers in Canada. In coldest 

 weather, the old birds hover the squabs more carefully. 



City people can keep pigeons in the garret of a house, or the 

 loft of a barn, without a foot of ground being needed. In 

 such a case the flying pen, or place to which the pigeons go 

 for sun and air, can be built out on a platform. The illus- 

 tration (page ^4) shows how to utilize a window of a garret. 

 If you think that rats will trouble you in either a garret or 

 barn loft, cover the floor inside, especially the comers, with 

 fine wire netting through which it will be impossible for the 

 rats to gnaw from below. 



One of our customers in Illinois, a rich horse breeder having 



