Time To Learn What A Dovecote Is: Cold Start

Cs Dovecote1
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I can’t remember exactly how, but I came across the word “dovecote” recently. Do you know what a dovecote is? I didn’t. But I do now, and, even better, I know that there are automotive-based dovecotes, so those are, of course, the best sort of dovecotes, and suitable to be included here, in a Cold Start!

A dovecote is basically, a pigeon house. Usually it’s for homing pigeons, which were, as you probably know, used for communications for, jeez, millenia – hell, Pliny the Elder even mentions their use for sending messages back in ancient Roman times! That’s right, the elder Pliny!

Messenger pigeons can, somehow, return to their home nest, even if it’s about 1,000 miles away, and they can do it at speeds of about 60 mph! These are incredible birds! During WWI, mobile dovecotes, like the one you see up top, made from a London General Omnibus Company B-type bus were used, and they were basically big, likely stinky pigeon houses that could drive around, and the pigeons within could be sent with messages back to HQ, which is where the pigeon’s home nests were.

Here’s another one, of a make I haven’t been able to identify yet, but am very curious about:

Cs Dovecote2

Look at that strange radiator, with the round hole there! This looks to be a sort of early cab-over design, too, with the driver perched atop the engine, and a whole pigeon-house perched atop that! I wish I could make out that badge. Hold on, let me try something here. COMPUTER! Zoom and enhance!

Cs Dovecote Badge

Hm, that didn’t really help.

That thing looks like it has solid-rubber tires, too, and is quite beefy in construction, which it would have to be, seeing as how a whole house has been built on it. If this thing could do more than, say 35 mph I’d be impressed.

Still, the important thing is we’re all aware of motorized dovecotes now, and they’re fascinating. Scientists aren’t exactly certain just how homing pigeons manage to do what they do, but it seems to have something to do with magnetoreception and iron particles called “cuticulosomes” in pigeon ears. But this isn’t even really certain, either. It’s still a beautiful mystery!

 

 

46 thoughts on “Time To Learn What A Dovecote Is: Cold Start

  1. Since it’s a French bus converted into a pigeonhole;..

    Here’s a bit of military fun : the French Army still has a Pigeon Unit.

    It’s part of the 8th Transmission Regiment and the pigeon home is in the Mont Valérien Fort.

    1. Holy shit that’s terrifying. Not sure how they do it in my neck of the woods, where pigeon racing is somewhat popular. I don’t think it’s truckoad-of-pigeons popular, though.

  2. It’s a converted double-decker bus, probably a Brillié-Schneider P2 retired from the Paris fleet because double-deckers weren’t that popular.

    I should have let that stand alone so I’d look like I know something, but that’s the result of around 90 minutes of obsessive Googling, including discovery of the original image published in 1915.

      1. Thanks. These days I’ve got a little more free time and a little less psychopharmaceutical medication, so I let the compulsive flag fly.

        After ironing it and making sure it was precisely perpendicular to the flagpole, of course.

  3. Pigeons certainly have been messengers for a long time, but most dovecotes were built to breed them for food (they are better at foraging than chickens, and breed pretty fast). Later on they developed a large community of Pigeon Fanciers who bred them for show or just fun, the early 19th century version of Autopian readers.

  4. “[A]t speeds of about 60 mph!”
    That’s indeed fast but, pffft, Mexican free-tailed bats can do 100 mph which would make them the fastest mammal *and* the fastest flying animal in level flight (peregrine falcons can hit 240 mph in steep dives but only 68 mph in level flight.) As smart as bats are, though, it’s probably not possible to train them to deliver messages. Just as well, as seeing how all species of bats are already stressed as it is.

    1. As smart as bats are, though, it’s probably not possible to train them they are too smart to deliver messages for humans

      Fixed it!

      Just as well, as seeing how all species of bats are already stressed as it is.

      Amen! Save the bats! Eat those insects! (Okay, some of them are allowed to be fruitarian.)

    1. Came here looking for the Mercedes-RV-conversion comment and not disappointed. Well played, Canopysaurus. You’re my second-favorite dinosaur after the Thesaurus.

  5. Barnaby! My trusty pigeon has brought back a message from that fetching young lady! I had sent her my photograph with a note proposing a carnal rendezvous. Drat! It says “Swipe left”.

    Tinder was way different back then.

    1. Fried pigeon does sound like something the English would eat. It goes nicely with lamprey pie and a beer strong enough to cover up the taste of a lamprey pie.

  6. I thought that header image was some sort of home-brewed RV where they had mounted an old wooden house on a chassis but man, the actual explanation is even better!

  7. Well let’s see, with that oval shaped badge it could be either a Ford or a Toyota or a Hyundai or a Subaru or an Infiniti or a Bugatti or a Pagani or a Land Rover or a Venturi or a Peterbilt or a Lagonda or an Oakland or a Wolseley

    Why do so many car companies use ovals?

  8. One of the premiere guys doing research on this magnetic geolocation stuff is from Baylor medical school down in Houston. His name is J. David Dickman. Which has to be one of the best damned scientist names I have ever heard in my life. His articles are freaking fascinating.

            1. And that’s a sticking point in the current contract talks…they are also demanding a 4 day work week, and better retirement benefits.

              These sort of things are one reason I will stick to “chicken.”

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