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I HAVE BEEN BLESSED!
The
Mike Schmidt Story
1956: MIKE ECHOS -
RICHARDSON, TEXAS
1961: BUD HAHNE - MINNEAPOLIS, MN
1975: LOU POFERL - ROSEVILLE, MN
1980: JOE JOHNSON - OLYMPIA, WA
Mike Echos - Richardson, Texas
LOVE – RESPECT & CARE
FOR THE BIRDS AND YOUR FELLOW FLYERS
My roots and love for this great Sport and
Hobby of Racing Pigeons goes back to 1956 when an 8 year old kid would ride his bike across the
city of Richardson, Texas to visit Mr. Echos and his beautiful Racing
Pigeons. My buddies, Jerry and Jim
Crawford, and I would sit and look at those beautiful birds all day long until
Mr. Echos would come home from work and we could help him with the chores. We hoped that some day we could have birds
half that beautiful. Mr. Echos spent
many hours with this young boy teaching me how to love and care for the birds
and occasionally selling me one or two for .50 cents to a whole dollar. I know now that he never gave them to me so
that I learned that they had value and that I should appreciate them as valued
additions to my loft. He never once had
a bad word about any of his competitors or for this trio of bothersome kids
that were always hanging around. I won
my very first race in 1957 with Mr. Echos' birds competing against the Crawford
boys and Bobby Steal. The race distance
was a HUGE 5 miler and "Big Red" won it for me. The Crawford boys moved to Seattle,
Washington in 1959 and sent me pictures of their new loft which they flew from
as junior members in the Seattle Racing Pigeon Club. They sent Gold Bands to Mr. Echos which he
and I then selected the pairs that young birds would be banded from to be sent
them. Mr. Echos paid the shipping and
never asked for any thing in return. In 1961 my Dad was transferred to
Minneapolis, MN for work and it broke my heart to have to say good buy to Mr.
Echos. He gave me several pairs of his
great birds and with the help of my Mom and Dad we loaded them on the train and shipped them to Minneapolis,
MN. I LEARNED A LOT ABOUT LIFE AND A LOT
ABOUT THE BIRDS FROM MR. ECHOS.
Bud Hahne – Minneapolis, MN
INTEGRITY – SPORTMANSHIP – A CHAMPION
1961: When my birds arrived in the freight
office of the Minneapolis, MN rail road fait would have it that one of the best
flyers in the Mid West would be working there.
I can still hear Mr. Hahne’s voice when asked a 13 year old kid, “Are
these birds YOURS?” Guess he
couldn’t believe that a kid could have that quality of bird, but as I said, Mr.
Echos never gave me anything but the best. My
Dad made me a make shift loft out of a refrigerator box and the Texas birds
were now up in Minnesota. Mr. Hahne
helped sponsor me into the Minneapolis Racing Pigeon Club made up of Champion
Flyers like George Loahr, Sherm Bergeron, Bob Houser, Fred Thompson, Harley
Thompson and fellow junior flyer, at that time, Bob Capitola. Some neighborhood kids broke into my little
loft and let all of my Texas birds go. I
was absolutely heart broken. Mr. Hahne
heard what happened and invited me over to see him and his beautiful family of
Charles Hitzeman Sions, and I mean they were BEAUTIFUL. I’d shovel snow, mow lawns, any job I
could do then take the bus over to Mr. Hahne’s to purchase one of his beauties
for the price of $5.00 a young bird. There were
no gifts as Mr. Hahne also wanted to teach me the value of the birds. I soon learned what he had done for me when I
had to quit the sport in High School to pursue Athletics. Those $5.00 birds were going out of my loft
to the highest bidder for $35.00 to $100.00 each. Bud Hahne never gave that kid junk. Lots of conversations over the kitchen table
overlooking his fantastic garage loft while his wife Gracie would bring Mr.
Hahne and his young guest cookies and milk.
A LOT OF MY SUCCESS AS AN ADULT FLYER CAN BE ATTRIBUTED TO THE HOURS
SHARED WITH MR. HAHNE.
Louie Poferl – Roseville, MN
GENEROSITY – QUALITY – PRIORITIES – FAMILY – A CHAMPION
1971: I had gone to the University of
Minnesota, Duluth, [UMD] to be a College Wrestler and maybe get an education in
the process. I ended up married and in
Duluth for the duration. I was driving
home from work one day and saw a group of Racing Pigeons returning home from a
training flight. My years as a
junior flyer trained these eyes so I knew that those weren’t commons the way
they were flying. I followed them to
the Duluth loft of Tony Packovich’s and was thrilled to find out that Duluth had
a Racing Pigeon Club. I came home to
tell my young wife Eileen that I’d like to start Racing Pigeons again. She never knew that I raced them as a kid and
asked how was I going to ride them.
Shortly there after a 12’ X 12’ loft was built and I was now back at it.
Racing Pigeons was like an addiction, once it’s in your blood, you are hooked,
and I had it bad. I was given 20 pairs of breeders from the
guys in the club and started out after my first young bird season. My first year of racing I raised 100 young
birds and at the end of the season had only 3 birds left. The same thing happened the second year and I
knew it was time to call my childhood mentor Bud Hahne for some advise, help
and hopefully, some birds that knew how to come home. Bud was a good friend of Louie Poiferl at
that time. From Bud I purchased several
pairs of his World Class Sions and Louie sold me several off his Twin City
Combine Champion Buittas. I loved
showing the birds as well as racing them and both of these flyers won more that
their share of shows in addition to being the flyers to beat on race day,
particularly on the Long Distance. Louie
and I struck up a friendship that lasted to this very day. Many, many hours were spent in his back yard
with his wife Aggie bring coffee and something great to eat while Louie and I
talked about the birds. Louie’s son
Bob was flying with him at the time and the Loft of Poferl & Son was the loft to
beat in those days in the Twin Cities.
Louie taught me about the Widowhood System, Young Bird Racing, how to
mate them up to produce repeat Champions thru the generations but much more
than this. He was a great father and
husband and taught me that family should always come first. He was a strict culler and only kept what was
going to be a Champion. Many a time
I questioned why he was getting rid of a particular bird, pleading with him not
to destroy it, but he said “Only keep the best, get rid of the rest”. My first National Mid-West Classic 600
Mile Champion “Renee’s Find” in 1979, was out of Louie’s birds. LOUIE TAUGHT ME HOW TO BE A CHAMPION, THE
IMPORTANCE OF YOUR FAMILY IN RELATIONSHIP TO THE BIRDS, GENEROSITY AND QUALITY IN ONLY GIVING FLYERS THE
ABSOLUTE BEST AND THE PROPER PERSPECTIVE OF YOUR TIME BETWEEN FAMILY AND TIME SPENT WITH THE BIRDS. He was a great friend and mentor and I owe
him a lot of the credit for any of the success I have been able to have.
Joe Johnson – Olympia, Washington
GENEROSITY – INTEGRITY – LOVE FOR THE BIRDS – A CHAMPION
1980:
In 1980, the same year that Mount Saint Hellen erupted, I took my little
family of 5, wife Eileen, daughters Renee, Jessica and son Don, to visit my
sister Jean and her family in Olympia, Washington. I had won the Pudgett Sound Futurity the year
before so knew some of the flyers out there but this was not a pigeon trip but
a family trip. You all know though, that any pigeon flyer on a trip is
always looking for lofts in the back yards of the homes he drives by. Near my sisters home in Olympia was a guy
that had a loft in his back yard. It
didn’t take long before I made my way over to meet him and to look at his birds. The flyer was Joe Johnson. The birds were the most fantastic group
of Slate and Plum Slate Vernaza’s I’d ever seen.
I looked at Joe and said “If you’re not the best flyer in this area
you’ve got to be one of the best”. He
just looked at me and smiled. Never
bragged about his birds he let others do that for him. It was Friday night and I accompanied Joe
to the race shipping for that week’s young bird race. At the Club House I discovered just what a
great Champion Joe and his family of birds were. It was a lot of fun at the Club House, I felt
like a celebrity, flyers new me from the Pudgett Sound Futurity win of the
prior year and being with Joe was like being with the King of the Sport. Joe saw how much I loved his Slates and their
style of Racing Pigeon. When we were
packing to return to Duluth Joe came over and asked if we had room for a couple
of pairs of young birds. He gave me four
young birds off his Foundation Pairs.
Unbelievable! He taught me a lot
on that day and even more through the years via long phone conversations.
JOE NEVER BRAGGED ABOUT HIS BIRDS, HE LET
THEM DO THE TALKING ON RACE DAY. HE WAS
A TRUE AMBASSADOR OF THE SPORT, ALWAYS WILLING TO GIVE ADVISE AND A HELPING
HAND. HE LOVED HIS BIRDS AND APPRECIATED
IT WHEN OTHERS COULD SEE THE QUALITY OF HIS FAMILY. HE TAUGHT ME HOW TO BE A CHAMPION.
Why I am the way I am.
With mentors like these how could you go
wrong. I have been blessed to
have had some of the Greats in the Sport be considered my friends. They have taught me much about the birds,
life and how to work hard with a plan, to be a Champion. If I’ve had any success, it is to their
credit. All four of these Greats are
now flying their Racers with the Lord, I miss them all, owe them everything, and
hopefully can continue to make them proud with my efforts using “their”
knowledge.
That’s why I sell these
Great World Class birds for $100.00 each in my 1st Round and Late Hatch Specials. That’s why my regular prices for the
Young Birds are so low. To whom much is given
much is expected. I’ve been
fortunate to have developed friendships with some of the Modern Day Greats in
the Sport, Waldo Slie, Herman Beverdam, Chris Peeman and Mike Ganus. When I offer young birds from the pairs
acquired from these flyers they are from their absolute best. Every pair I bred from and offer young birds
from would be FOUNDATION BIRDS for most lofts.
They cost me a fortune, at least for this teacher, so we can’t give them
away but any one who does their home work will know that our prices are very
reasonable for the quality we are offering.
I was taught from some of the best in the
sport that what counts is:
INTEGRITY – QUALITY –
GENEROSITY –
SPORTSMANSHIP –
PRIORITIES – AND FAMILY FIRST.
I know
that paying outrageous prices for pigeons can really hurt a young family and so
I try to help the Sport by providing these quality birds at a working mans wage. That’s what Mr. Echos, Mr. Hahne, Mr.
Poferl and Mr. Johnson taught me, and I was paying attention.
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