The history and virtues of eating pigeon meat (squab)

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  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2024
  • Thanks to Misen for sponsoring this video! Upgrade your kitchen with Misen's amazing cookware and knives. Go to bit.ly/3qYrgB2 and use promo code ragusea to get 20% off your first order.
    Thanks to Andrew Blechman, author of "PIGEONS: The Fascinating Saga of the World’s Most Revered and Reviled Bird": www.andrewblechman.com/pigeons...
    2001 study showing very low pathogen prevalence on squab farms: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11214...
    My old video about the near-extinction of American bison: • The argument for eatin...
    Map of passenger pigeon range by Valérie Chansigaud, via Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passeng...
    Map of rock dove range by Viktor Kravtchenko, via Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_do...
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Komentáře • 4,4K

  • @lior6222
    @lior6222 Před 2 lety +2013

    That's why I season my cities, not my pigeons.

    • @robert-janthuis9927
      @robert-janthuis9927 Před 2 lety +61

      Imagine companies doing this, they pay a city for the rights to any pigeons caught in the city, then dump specific trash for the pigeons to eat and then catch and kill the pigeons.

    • @lior6222
      @lior6222 Před 2 lety +29

      @@robert-janthuis9927 That actually may have an effect on their meat, brilliant.

    • @hikari4483
      @hikari4483 Před 2 lety

      Just stop comment this on other videos

    • @suivzmoi
      @suivzmoi Před 2 lety +14

      @@hikari4483 at least 500 people disagree with you

    • @yasintonge823
      @yasintonge823 Před 2 lety

      xD

  • @deveus1
    @deveus1 Před 2 lety +4614

    When he starts posting roadkill recipes, he will have achieved his final form.

    • @noahway13
      @noahway13 Před 2 lety +178

      He'll be a real southerner.

    • @jamesbenz3228
      @jamesbenz3228 Před 2 lety +97

      There's this vice documentary of a guy in I think Scotland of a guy who eats roadkill regularly. He says badger head is his favorite of all the meats. Lots of different textures he says. Super cool documentary.

    • @alsaunders7805
      @alsaunders7805 Před 2 lety +16

      The meat just comes from a different place, I didn't know there were special recipes. 🤓🍻

    • @deadfr0g
      @deadfr0g Před 2 lety +131

      Popular food trends in 2012: “from farm to table”
      Popular food trends in 2022: *“from grille to grill”*

    • @BSFilms1997
      @BSFilms1997 Před 2 lety +108

      “Why I season my birdshot, not my food.”

  • @DonMarzzoni
    @DonMarzzoni Před 2 lety +695

    We grew pigeons when I was a kid. I'm good on the eat part. They are cool to have as a pet. We had white "doves" that we released at weddings they automatically know how to come back home. Apparently you can charge thousands of dollars to literally release your own pets that know how to make their way home.

    • @seekyunbounded9273
      @seekyunbounded9273 Před rokem +17

      Lol

    • @twizl4
      @twizl4 Před rokem +46

      That’s actually really smart

    • @sammicoporsammicopor
      @sammicoporsammicopor Před rokem +18

      Thats what I call a lucrative business idea

    • @2MeterLP
      @2MeterLP Před rokem +35

      I think its funny to consider that frrom the birds perspective. The doves must have been pretty annoyed to regularly be carted out to who knows where to be released over noisy crowds and then have to fly home :D

    • @bluecolumbine
      @bluecolumbine Před rokem +2

      I want to get into doing the dove release.

  • @ShailabhR
    @ShailabhR Před rokem +50

    I grew up eating pigeon meat regularly in my home country Nepal. It is still one of the most popular meat choices there. People grow them in wooded nests, harvesting is done just before they are capable of flying. It definitely tastes amazing. They feed on grains and are very safe to consume.

  • @literallylogan6750
    @literallylogan6750 Před 2 lety +2168

    the ytpers now have a voiceclip of adam saying "meaty breasts"

  • @AbsulouteZero
    @AbsulouteZero Před 2 lety +6112

    Can't wait for Adam to eventually show us the pigeons he's raised and how to cook them.

    • @TheSlavChef
      @TheSlavChef Před 2 lety +488

      Why I season my pigeon food, not my pigeons.

    • @Pontif11
      @Pontif11 Před 2 lety +77

      Reading this as i watch. I'm disappointed he doesn't make pidgeon in the vid :(

    • @magnussvik9683
      @magnussvik9683 Před 2 lety +8

      @@TheSlavChef Damn thats smart

    • @TheSlavChef
      @TheSlavChef Před 2 lety +7

      @@magnussvik9683 big slav brains!

    • @A_Casual_NPC
      @A_Casual_NPC Před 2 lety +6

      @@TheSlavChef jesus fuck, that cracked me up hahaha

  • @maimee1
    @maimee1 Před 2 lety +213

    In my country, Thailand, there was an outbreak of the "bird flu", H5N1, which, while it affected poultry a lot more than pigeons, somehow all the birds were then seen as disease vectors to be avoided (after all it's called the "bird flu"). What birds look as if they could be disease vectors the most? Pigeons. The poultry most affected by the disease (chickens) had economic incentives to have had their reputations be recovered. Probably no one was advocating for pigeons so... maybe that's why it's stuck, at least in my brain as a child at the time.

    • @user-ze7sj4qy6q
      @user-ze7sj4qy6q Před rokem +8

      your english is really good if you're not a native speaker btw

    • @maimee1
      @maimee1 Před rokem +6

      @@user-ze7sj4qy6q thanks for the complement 😄

    • @SleepyGhoul834
      @SleepyGhoul834 Před rokem +2

      Actually pigeons carry ticks, bedbugs and other parasites other than bird flu though i agree no one advocated about pigeons. Btw Mai mee in Thai means nothing 😅

    • @Poopyduckling9999
      @Poopyduckling9999 Před rokem

      @@user-ze7sj4qy6q most of us had to learn some english for carrying on day-to-day activity.

    • @dxshawn532
      @dxshawn532 Před rokem

      @@Poopyduckling9999 Gaye?

  • @woodsmn8047
    @woodsmn8047 Před rokem +16

    Birds are reluctant to fly in the dark for obvious reasons so collecting pigeons at night was one thing I did as a younger person .. there was a nearby abandoned sugar factory which had maintenance walkways up in the rafters and huge numbers of pigeons roosted up there all I needed was a bag and a flashlight .. great fun and delicious eating

  • @kyeshi98
    @kyeshi98 Před 2 lety +3095

    Adam's next video: "how I caught and cooked my own pigeon from down the street"

  • @albertosara416
    @albertosara416 Před 2 lety +1448

    "so what's your defence mechanism?"
    pigeons: we just breed so much our predators can't possibly eat ALL of us

    • @jasoncoates1835
      @jasoncoates1835 Před 2 lety +152

      Ah yes. The Rabbit Gambit.

    • @AubriGryphon
      @AubriGryphon Před 2 lety +95

      Also explosive acceleration, provided by those big, meaty breast muscles. That's why they sit there and stare at you until the last second -- they only get one chance to dodge, so they have to do it when a predator is committed to the attack.

    • @luddity
      @luddity Před 2 lety +12

      Just like with humans in the cities.

    • @codediporpal
      @codediporpal Před 2 lety +28

      Pigeons used to be all over the place in San Francisco 15 years ago. Now I hardly see them. Just saw a peregrine falcon eating a pigeon outside my bedroom window a few weeks ago though!

    • @enolopanr9820
      @enolopanr9820 Před 2 lety +2

      @@codediporpal did you get it on video?

  • @hughmanatee7433
    @hughmanatee7433 Před rokem +26

    My grandparents were immigrants from Sicily. They made a number of pigeon holes in the gable end of their attic, each hole had a nesting box behind it. We ate pigeon eggs and squabs. I was very young at the time and I can’t remember the taste or the size of the eggs. I’m imagining that it tastes a bit like duck, kinda rich dark meat maybe. It was at least 55 years ago.

    • @larbi1075
      @larbi1075 Před rokem

      Please any negative effect of killing white dove

  • @CaptainHightop
    @CaptainHightop Před 2 lety +46

    My grandfather raised pigeons for racing and for food, and I have hunted wild dove since I was a kid, so the idea that some people have that pigeons are dirty or an animal that you shouldn't eat seems strange to me. When I see pigeons in the city I have that cartoon pop up over my head where they turn into a roasted bird right before my eyes.
    Also I don't think city pigeons would necessarily taste bad or be more likely to be toxic due to chemical ingestion. Pigeons are actually rather dicerning eaters, they don't just peck up anything on the ground. And as far as eating old food scraps, almost every small family farm feeds food scraps to chickens and hogs on a daily basis and nobody ever thinks it makes the meat bad or dirty or something.

    • @paulhunter6742
      @paulhunter6742 Před rokem

      Humans are one who taken wild animals like Hogs, chickens, cows, sheep etc and artificially fatten them up with chemicals or even garbage. And we wonder why so many diseases in them. Remember the Mad Cow disease outbreak as turns out farmers feeding ground up cows to other cows! 🤢🤮

  • @fifzeppelin
    @fifzeppelin Před 2 lety +571

    This man won't stop until he's consumed every bird.

  • @iandiederen9349
    @iandiederen9349 Před 2 lety +590

    Next Video:
    "The Elites don't want you to know this, but the pigeons at the park are free"

    • @chickenmcdouble
      @chickenmcdouble Před 2 lety +25

      “10 Tips on how to get rich quick”

    • @areejashraf7413
      @areejashraf7413 Před 2 lety +17

      Step 1:- catch pigeons at the park.
      Step2:- a quick visit to the vet to check them all over, or maybe a farm vet.
      Step3:- get the healthy ones, feed them good food to empty out their stomachs of garbage.
      Step4:- profit.

    • @yodasmomisondrugs7959
      @yodasmomisondrugs7959 Před 2 lety +5

      Because "we'll own nothing and be happy."

    • @yuu9258
      @yuu9258 Před 2 lety +11

      @@areejashraf7413 That's a lot of steps. And won't make much of a profit without final step. Final step is to sell the meat as Goose meat. Lol

    • @tonytrott6318
      @tonytrott6318 Před 2 lety +1

      The pigeons in the park are also full of disease and poison

  • @K1S7Z3
    @K1S7Z3 Před rokem +17

    Something else that is important to note about pigeons from an agricultural standpoint is that their poop, when they eat only the seeds that are their correct diets, is some of the best fertilizer out there and is incredibly easy to use and work with. It is round and solid but soft and when the birds are healthy not urial or white and liquid at all.

  • @cubanassassinmma2040
    @cubanassassinmma2040 Před 2 lety +211

    I did lethal pest removal of over 30 pigeons out of 50 and I fed some to my dog but was very intrigued by the smell so I tried it.... needless to say my dog ate 10 and me and my cousins ate 20 of them 😂

    • @jacobsmith6136
      @jacobsmith6136 Před rokem +33

      My invitation must’ve gotten lost in the mail.

    • @grundgesetzart.1463
      @grundgesetzart.1463 Před rokem +5

      wow. you are a good person. Hope some feral dogs take a few bites of your meat. No loss to humanity.

    • @corbeaudejugement
      @corbeaudejugement Před rokem +47

      ​@@grundgesetzart.1463 (rock) pigeons are an invasive species. they out-compete natives for food and habitat. culling them is a net positive, despite how cute they are.

    • @cleanerben9636
      @cleanerben9636 Před rokem +43

      @@grundgesetzart.1463 oh no! The animal bred to be eaten actually got eaten!
      Cry about it.

    • @jade_capricorn
      @jade_capricorn Před 11 měsíci +37

      ​@@grundgesetzart.1463 I want you to remember that it's not normal to wish death on strangers. It's fucking weird. Go outside.

  • @99sonder
    @99sonder Před 2 lety +634

    Main takeaway from this video: Adam saying Among us for the YTPs

    • @dolphin435
      @dolphin435 Před 2 lety +85

      Don’t forget about meaty breasts

    • @seronymus
      @seronymus Před 2 lety +81

      There are meaty breasts among us

    • @tissuepaper9962
      @tissuepaper9962 Před 2 lety +12

      He *has* to know what he's doing, right? There's no way he would have said "among us" otherwise...

    • @tissuepaper9962
      @tissuepaper9962 Před 2 lety +18

      @@paddyotterness do you not know what a YTP is?

    • @99sonder
      @99sonder Před 2 lety +18

      @@tissuepaper9962 Eh, I mean "among us" is quite a common phrase. My guess is that he knows what he's doing by making a script as if all the YTP's and the meme culture didn't exist and then just let the memes come naturally and let them bolster eachother on their own. No input needed from his end one way or the other.

  • @TheWutang1995
    @TheWutang1995 Před 2 lety +376

    I'm from a small farming town with a lot of old Italian immigrants and one of my dad's friends who's as old school Italian as it gets was telling me a story about how he grew up really poor and his parents were having some wealthy Italians over for dinner and his mom was making dove cacciatore. His dad didn't get any dove that morning when he went hunting but he did get a few pigeons and I believe a crow or something like that so his mom cooked it up and his exact words were "those rich Italians said it was the best dove cacciatore they've ever had"

    • @saumitjin5526
      @saumitjin5526 Před 2 lety +5

      Love this story XDD Thanks for sharing :))

    • @Me-eb3wv
      @Me-eb3wv Před 2 lety +2

      Lol :)

    • @fractal5764
      @fractal5764 Před 2 lety +2

      rip crow

    • @xyzsame4081
      @xyzsame4081 Před 2 lety +2

      Laura Ingalls Wilder describes how ? starlings destroyed the wheat fields of her parents (the last location they had moved too) it was a huge flock eating what they likely saw as an all you can eat buffet. her father shot at them, but to no avail. They ate the birds as roast (2 per person) and she wrote they tasted good.

    • @PigeonKingdomBd
      @PigeonKingdomBd Před 2 lety

      very nice video
      love from pigeon kingdom bd

  • @judgeholden6761
    @judgeholden6761 Před 2 lety +36

    If anyone has ever heard of "12 gauge" shotguns: the guns that they used to just about extinctify any commercially viable flying flock bird were super large 2 or 4 gauge shotguns. The smaller the gauge, the bigger the hole/bullet and the spread of the birdshot. They would effectively be firing "hand grenades" or "shrapnel" into the air out of cannons that a man could only use laying down or mounted. Entire flocks of birds would drop from each shot. There are a few old timers left who REMEMBER old timers from when they were young who did this long ago, but people forget these massive things existed. If you are curious, look up "The Winchester Wildfowler". I don't think I could bring myself to fire that without someone wrapping my head up in packed cotton xD

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 Před rokem +3

      They were called "punt guns" in some areas

  • @mitchellminer9597
    @mitchellminer9597 Před 2 lety +13

    "Squab" also means seat cushion.
    If you want to know when a squab is about ready to start flying and getting tough, look under their wings. When the feathers fill in there, they are gonna go.
    There are mad varieties of pigeons. Tumblers actually can't fly well, and flip over in the air. People who live in city apartments can grow pigeons on rooftops.

    • @dmo7815
      @dmo7815 Před 2 lety +4

      Clean the nest for the next batch . No need to feed or water them ,, they will find their own .

  • @ZergrushEddie
    @ZergrushEddie Před 2 lety +439

    Food and how it falls into and out of taboo is fascinating. "Who would eat the abominations of the sea, the creatures that fed on the refuse of sailors in Rime of the Ancient Mariner?"
    Fried calamari is pretty darn good.

    • @Northraider123
      @Northraider123 Před 2 lety +68

      Just as fascinating is how what is considered "fancy" changes, my mom could tell you stories of how lobster was considered "poor man's food" in newfoundland when she was growing up.

    • @curtisthomas2670
      @curtisthomas2670 Před 2 lety +47

      Lobster was fed to prisoners, there were even a couple prison riots over lobster turning up too often on the menu

    • @Northraider123
      @Northraider123 Před 2 lety +32

      @@curtisthomas2670 and the reason they were pissed was because they served it ground up shell and all

    • @senseofblue2699
      @senseofblue2699 Před 2 lety +27

      @@Northraider123 yeah, in scarface Montana complains about having to eat octopus all the time in prison, while that stuff is considered here a luxury that is meant to be consumed with alcohol

    • @chadpendt2863
      @chadpendt2863 Před 2 lety +20

      @@Northraider123 thats actually a fine way to serve it. lobster meatballs where the shell is ground into a fine powder and acts sorta like a binder.
      the problem is prisons didnt give a shit and just chucked it all into a meat grinder.

  • @lyoshiya9387
    @lyoshiya9387 Před 2 lety +338

    Looking at his past recent videos, I was holding my breath the whole time waiting for adam to show us how he hunts and prepares pigeons in his new backyard

  • @anniehosking2408
    @anniehosking2408 Před 2 lety +9

    In the UK we can sometimes get wood pigeon. I used to buy it from a farmer at my local farmers' market. Wild rabbit too. Both were shot as farm pests. Since then I have moved to a different area and I haven't found a local butcher or farmer that sells them.
    If you are buying rabbit or wood pigeon skinned and jointed you cannot judge the age of the creature so casseroling is a good option for cooking.

  • @currently_In_stealth_behind_u

    i love how this guy actually gets sponsors that make sense for the type of content he produces

  • @Movie_Games
    @Movie_Games Před 2 lety +2060

    The whole video I thought we were building an argument that it's okay to eat city pigeons. Then right at the end, "NO!" Don't eat them.

    • @circa134
      @circa134 Před 2 lety +230

      Yeah and I heard someone ate city pigeons and couldn’t get pregnant because apparently the city put gave the pigeon birth control chemicals to stop the pigeon overpopulation. So don’t eat city pigeons because you don’t know what chemicals the city has been feeding them

    • @lokisgodhi
      @lokisgodhi Před 2 lety +194

      Most urban areas have laws prohibiting hunting within the city limits. Pigeons are hard to catch if you can't hunt them. If you own property you can build a trap in the backyard (if you have one) or on the roof. Here in NYC we have people who net them on the street, then sell them to live shooting clubs in Eastern Pennsylvania. This really enrages the animal rights nutters here in the city.

    • @deathdealer312
      @deathdealer312 Před 2 lety +127

      @@lokisgodhi nutters? really?

    • @gamingnerd3476
      @gamingnerd3476 Před 2 lety +126

      @@lokisgodhi yeah it’s totally nuts to abhor shooting animals for sport

    • @m_uz1244
      @m_uz1244 Před 2 lety +116

      @@deathdealer312 I mean city pigeons don't serve any purpose and just make a mess, they get poop everywhere and transmit disease. At least that way they're actually feeding people or doing something that isn't literally harmful for the population, not to mention the practice creates jobs and opportunities for unskilled workers.

  • @domdomak2974
    @domdomak2974 Před 2 lety +973

    They're tasty birds, and living in the city makes us perceive them as pests while when I lived in a farm as a kid they were these cute clean birds

    • @PigeonKingdomBd
      @PigeonKingdomBd Před 2 lety +10

      very nice video
      love from pigeon kingdom bd

    • @darkdragonsoul99
      @darkdragonsoul99 Před 2 lety +36

      It's a weird thing most often then not pests are just the animals we interact with the most. It's got nothing to do with anything other then their omnipresents

    • @01jiratjiampoonsap80
      @01jiratjiampoonsap80 Před 2 lety +4

      I friggin love stewed / grilled duck with duck gravy

    • @01jiratjiampoonsap80
      @01jiratjiampoonsap80 Před 2 lety

      The gravy is practically salt

    • @BruceS42
      @BruceS42 Před 2 lety +6

      @@01jiratjiampoonsap80 Damn you! Now I need to go out and get some duck for lunch! I was all set to have something simple, maybe a hot dog, or some soup, but I can almost smell the duck now. I used to get "crispy duck" from Chinese restaurants, then discovered that a simple "roast duck" from an Asian market is essentially the same thing. I haven't had pigeon yet, but would happily try it. I don't know why people are so upset about the idea. Have they never seen a chicken farm? For Thanksgiving and Christmas, we don't get a turkey. Most years, I cook a duck or goose, sometimes a (domestic) pheasant or "Cornish hens". Wonderful meat.

  • @rickim1061
    @rickim1061 Před 2 lety +12

    As an owner of two pet pigeons, can confirm they are the sweetest most beautiful animals.

  • @karlkomec1427
    @karlkomec1427 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks Adam! I bought that book and am enjoying it. Pigeons and I go way back.
    I LOVE your posts! Information and entertainment in excellent proportions! Please keep ‘em coming!

  • @beautifulmeeses
    @beautifulmeeses Před 2 lety +160

    Adam said "among us" purely to fuel the ytp community and you cannot convince otherwise

  • @MrSnrub666
    @MrSnrub666 Před 2 lety +741

    I can't wait for the follow-up: "Why I Season My Sidewalk, NOT My Pigeon"

  • @shanestuart-ramirez429
    @shanestuart-ramirez429 Před 2 lety +2

    My grandmother used to tell me back in Nebraska, they used to get a gunny sack and grab some free pigeons from under bridges for dinner during the WW2. It fed a very large family during hard times and very much enjoyed.

  • @valkyrie1066
    @valkyrie1066 Před 2 lety +7

    They are so meek and trusting and social, they are very easy to tame and teach. I worked at a beach amusement park, and I regularly went to interact with them. They flocked to me, and some regularly sat ON me. It amused the tourists. I have no special powers, other than a love for animals, and a habit of showing them that love. They do the rest. My daughter and I regularly caught the odd Pidgeon to cut the fiber, hair, and string that accumulates on their feet, feed the bird, and release it. It got to the point that several severely lame birds began to arrive on my worksite with a posse. I could swear they brought them to me, they rarely put up any kind of objection and held still for the cutting. Perhaps, I like to think, they knew the necessary cutting would result in being fed and released. My immediate supervisor, a true city dweller, was both horrified and amazed, and began to tell me "they brought you another one" She disliked birds as a group, but was amazed at their behavior. I would probably have gotten in trouble, but the Disney like scenes were adored by the tourists. (and I kept most of my Pidgeon whisperer duties to my lunch/break time)

    • @faiz4world
      @faiz4world Před rokem

      Nice

    • @PhatChin
      @PhatChin Před rokem

      I think the pigeons knew you would clean up their little feet. It wasn't for the food. It was for the spa day.

  • @serenkeating7672
    @serenkeating7672 Před 2 lety +399

    Re: pigeons' homing ability - there was a solar storm in June and racing pigeons all over the UK and Ireland got super lost. My neighbour actually keeps racing pigeons and he lost several.

    • @bobmcguffin5706
      @bobmcguffin5706 Před 2 lety +9

      Interesting...

    • @codyv308
      @codyv308 Před 2 lety +40

      must be using earth's magnetic field to orient themselves,

    • @b.a.erlebacher1139
      @b.a.erlebacher1139 Před 2 lety +56

      It's well established that pigeons use the earth's magnetic field for navigation. There were experiments done decades ago sticking magnets to pigeons' heads, which disoriented them on long distance flights. Also, there are areas with magnetic anomalies in the local geology that confuse pigeons - racing pigeon owners are aware of them.

    • @seeker296
      @seeker296 Před 2 lety

      Awwww D=

    • @seeker296
      @seeker296 Před 2 lety +4

      @@b.a.erlebacher1139 its not well established. I thought. Its just a widely accepted postulate

  • @mine.g919
    @mine.g919 Před 2 lety +712

    "extremely social and gentle"
    *takes one step in front of a pigeon*
    Pigeon: *oh frick that*

    • @davidfarrell6500
      @davidfarrell6500 Před 2 lety +102

      Have you ever been in a large city? City pigeons don’t give a FUCK about you… they literally do not get out of your way hahahahaha

    • @senjusan6359
      @senjusan6359 Před 2 lety +69

      @@davidfarrell6500 Exactly, those birds are fearless they even don't move out of the car's way until the last second. I think that they have some kind of a game with each other or smth

    • @aggy2942
      @aggy2942 Před 2 lety +4

      @@senjusan6359 lmfao

    • @olindetroit7636
      @olindetroit7636 Před 2 lety +15

      I think you might be talking about some other bird. Here in New York city, Pigeons own the sidewalks. They really don't fear humans.

    • @Arcangel0723
      @Arcangel0723 Před 2 lety +5

      that is the opposite of my experience
      once I went to eat in a park and within seconds I was swarmed by like 100 pigeons and they no joke stole some of my food out of my hands, they are fearless birds

  • @Namasu604
    @Namasu604 Před 2 lety +3

    I live in Vancouver, and actually eat Squab pretty often. Almost all of the sit down Chinese restaurants serve it. Deep fried until well-done and crispy skinned.

  • @deepgardening
    @deepgardening Před 2 lety +12

    The closest relative (same genus, in fact) to the extinct Passenger Pidgeon is the Band-Tailed Pidgeon. Bandtails are Western forest birds, and do get hunted. There's a project to get the essential bits of Passenger Pidgeon into a Band-tail ovum and bring back the Passenger Pidgeon... no kidding.

    • @noturfather1106
      @noturfather1106 Před rokem

      I've taken and cooked a few bandtails and they're good tasting but so tough that you need to stew them to get them tender. They're much prettier to look at alive than dead and have a wonderful temperament compared to stellar Jay's and crows

    • @deepgardening
      @deepgardening Před rokem

      @@noturfather1106 I thought you were going to say Jays and Crows taste better! Were the bandtails yearlings or veterans? Stewing is only one way of tenderizing. I would guess that someone with culinary experience could fix a Bandtail up real nice. I know a few people who have hunted them, and NOT for trophies, eh?

    • @noturfather1106
      @noturfather1106 Před rokem

      @@deepgardening I imagine they were older, I don't see the squabs or can't tell them from the adults. I eat the ones I shoot and don't shoot the ones i want to keep seeing in the yard. They have a lovely purple head with pink eyelids and pink breast and neck feathers. They're all over the central oregon coast in the summer.

    • @deepgardening
      @deepgardening Před rokem

      A friend of mine driving for UPS found an abandoned fledgling crow and adopted it and named it Myra. She was quite pretty and developed a large vocabulary. Alas, he never cooked her. But tell me, how did you "take" and cook the Bandtails? People think Starlings are nasty, but a friend rescued an abandoned fledgling passerine that turned out to be a Starling, and he named her "Myra". She developed a huge vocabulary, things like "Myra's a pretty bird!" and she preferred her food served on a cookie sheet and covered with grass clippings, or dropped on the table top and covered with your hand so she could dart her beak between your fingers, spread them, and pick the food up. (a Starling's eyes can look at the end of it's beak)

  • @Danntzig
    @Danntzig Před 2 lety +308

    As a native French speaker I might wanna point out that "pigeon" is "pigeon" in French, and "dove" is "colombe". I never knew they where the same species. Might also point out - for those who might find this interesting - that pigeon's meat is often called, at least in Québec, "pigeonneau", which can also mean "baby pigeon". It tastes delicious.

    • @tomhalla426
      @tomhalla426 Před 2 lety +9

      Not the same species, but the same genus, like wolves and coyotes.

    • @princevesperal
      @princevesperal Před 2 lety +13

      The now-extinct, related bird called "passenger pigeon" in the video was called "tourte" by French-Canadians, which we get the word "tourtière" from! Nous sommes nés trop tard pour manger une «vraie» tourtière!

    • @BrainTimeOut
      @BrainTimeOut Před 2 lety +8

      Its the old rule of english. The peasants speak english and the upper class speaks with french words. Like pig/pork or cattle/beef

    • @georgiykireev9678
      @georgiykireev9678 Před 2 lety

      @@BrainTimeOut Ironic how over time "dove" became the fancier of the two words

    • @Xerxes2005
      @Xerxes2005 Před 2 lety +10

      @@princevesperal That's an urban legend. The word "tourte" existed in France well before we hunted passenger pigeons in America and was already used to call a kind of meat pie. The "tourtière" was the plate in which the "tourte" was cooked. Then, by a process of metonymy, the container ended up designating the content and the meal became a "tourtière".

  • @albarca5084
    @albarca5084 Před 2 lety +730

    "Pigeon is litterally just the french word for doves"
    frenchmen: hold my colombe

    • @jaysimpson2398
      @jaysimpson2398 Před 2 lety +8

      Oui

    • @albarca5084
      @albarca5084 Před 2 lety +8

      N'est ce pas

    • @rebix6848
      @rebix6848 Před 2 lety +22

      Was? Ich spreche kein Franzözisch!

    • @MsBaldSoprano
      @MsBaldSoprano Před 2 lety +32

      the french forsake 'pijon' centuries ago but we english speakers proudly carry on the forgotten ways

    • @ToveriJuri
      @ToveriJuri Před 2 lety +2

      Ihme perseilyä tämäkin kommenttiketju.

  • @dollarcoins
    @dollarcoins Před rokem +3

    I remember watching this old MTV special it followed an average western teen and an average teen in northern Africa. The northern African teen was an Arabian kid, in one part of the episode he went to a small pigeon coop and took out a pigeon and prepared it for a meal for his family. This show aired around 2004 I think, I hope good things turned out good for that guy.

  • @mikehunt3436
    @mikehunt3436 Před 2 lety +3

    Pigeons used to be a common urban food in the USA, people would keep pigeon coups as a hobby and a source of food. I can tell many anecdotes from my father and grandfather how the pigeon coup would be raided for birds and then pawned at the dinner table as cornish hens.

  • @zinoxechill
    @zinoxechill Před 2 lety +400

    Pigeon: *toots on Adam's head*
    Adam: So you wanna be next in my videos huh

    • @-Sean_
      @-Sean_ Před 2 lety +21

      They definitely obliterated his car before he made this

    • @jermarule34
      @jermarule34 Před 2 lety +41

      "You guys are fucked once the recipe video drops"

    • @TheSlavChef
      @TheSlavChef Před 2 lety +3

      pigeons here say "Gu-gu GU"

  • @diegostecca7319
    @diegostecca7319 Před 2 lety +121

    i'm italian and my grandma always makes some pidgeons for sundays, she is a farmer and grows em up herself, they are really good

    • @diegostecca7319
      @diegostecca7319 Před 2 lety +18

      @@paratirisis thanks man! Happy Mancini managed to win it, and the mad english are just the cherry on top ahah

    • @littlechemie5425
      @littlechemie5425 Před 2 lety +4

      @@diegostecca7319 *Mad English. I believe Scots is devouring their finest scotch rn lol.

    • @diegostecca7319
      @diegostecca7319 Před 2 lety +6

      @@littlechemie5425 Oh sorry, i confused brits and english, will fix in a second. By the way yeah, they were celebrating as hard as us italians!

    • @smolmonke1716
      @smolmonke1716 Před 2 lety

      @@littlechemie5425 ye we happy

    • @albertozaffonato1325
      @albertozaffonato1325 Před 2 lety +2

      Anche il nonno di mia morosa li alleva ancora, e che boni!

  • @IMeMineWho
    @IMeMineWho Před rokem +3

    Wow. Adam's videos are so informational..refreshingly different than most of YT. Being mostly pescatarian, I will likely not eat pigeon, but now Im so interested in pigeons.

  • @harrybellingham98
    @harrybellingham98 Před rokem

    i didnt watch your videos for a while. Ive binge watched so many. Im glad im back

  • @Alan-gj6en
    @Alan-gj6en Před 2 lety +650

    10:13
    I literally can’t escape it.
    get out of my head get outta my head

  • @giuuig
    @giuuig Před 2 lety +61

    Pigeon is literally my favorite bird meat, I first ate it in Florence, where they make these crispy ravioli filled with pigeon breast served with a balsamic vinegar sauce, just incredible

  • @bowdownandobey
    @bowdownandobey Před rokem

    I have owned this pan you advertised in the middle of the video for the better part of a year, just wanted to find a solid stainless steel pan worth paying money for. It is AMAZING and takes a lot of abuse. Love it. I bake then sear steaks with it, and make sauces in there after reglazing. It really is a great pan and I'm glad to see you doing an ad for a genuinely good product that frankly everyone should own

  • @m1sfit_l0v3
    @m1sfit_l0v3 Před 2 lety

    Great content as always. Thank you for this 🙏

  • @ssplintergirl
    @ssplintergirl Před 2 lety +142

    This got that Uncle Ben “You can take ducks from the park, I have over 392 ducks” energy

  • @tinlizzie37
    @tinlizzie37 Před 2 lety +271

    During WW2, my brother raised pigeons in Cleveland, Ohio. Since all things were rationed, and pigeons (squab) have much meat. We ate many of his unwanted collection, which was quite often. We had as many ways to make it as Bubba's mother had her many ways to make shrimp !

    • @beanosgaming6494
      @beanosgaming6494 Před 2 lety +12

      how old are you if i may ask

    • @97itachiuchiha
      @97itachiuchiha Před 2 lety +26

      @@beanosgaming6494 Assuming the 37 in their username references 1937, I'd guess 85!

    • @jahjoeka
      @jahjoeka Před 2 lety +3

      Back in your day sounds like hell.

    • @tinlizzie37
      @tinlizzie37 Před 2 lety +42

      @@beanosgaming6494 85 in July

    • @tinlizzie37
      @tinlizzie37 Před 2 lety +36

      @@jahjoeka Things were rationed is all, and took a while to get! A war was being fought from 1941 to 45 !

  • @KnightmarePhoenix_official

    I love pidgeons, we have mourning doves around where I live and they look so soft and sweet, and their calls are nice and gentle, exactly what you want to wake up to in the morning.
    Also pidgeons are so fun to draw. Half circle with another half circle layered over it, small oval on one end, big oval with two eyes, a nose, and a beak on the other. Then congrats! You've got a pidge.

  • @rcs3030
    @rcs3030 Před 2 lety +3

    Very informative Adam. Here in south Texas we enjoy the annual dove hunts. We have many wonderful social meals together eating the doves and /or Whitewing dove. Quite often we are treated to pigeons flying with the doves. They are fair game and are enjoyed at the social meals also. Some including myself actually prefer the pigeon. And there is no limit to the amount of pigeons that you may harvest. Pigeons are not protected by game laws .

  • @ricasiogaming7873
    @ricasiogaming7873 Před 2 lety +254

    “To harvest a squab, all you do is pick it up..” idk why but that sentence killed me 😂

    • @nahor88
      @nahor88 Před 2 lety +8

      I'm just glad to finally learn what "squab" is after a Home Improvement episode where Wilson's niece prepares it for the Taylors, lol.

    • @webtoedman
      @webtoedman Před 2 lety +4

      @@nahor88 It's also the upholsterer's technical term for the padded backrest part of an armchair.

    • @jerrypie
      @jerrypie Před 2 lety

      I appreciated his little demonstration too

    • @bobm7275
      @bobm7275 Před 2 lety

      Not positive but I think it's because Squab is young pigeon, I was taught Squab was 6 weeks or less.

    • @Rattlerjake1
      @Rattlerjake1 Před 2 lety

      The worst thing about squab is that they are so freakin' ugly (that they're cute), it 's hard to imagine eating it. The French will eat anything! LOL

  • @yokiyoki3937
    @yokiyoki3937 Před 2 lety +124

    Us Egyptians eat stuffed pigeons ALL THE TIME and it’s pretty delicious tbh. Some Egyptians also eat the bones of the bird because they are so soft after being cooked, and there’s not much meat on the bird anyways

    • @abu_alazm
      @abu_alazm Před 2 lety +7

      مفيش احلى من الحمام المحشي

    • @CardSearcher911
      @CardSearcher911 Před 2 lety +14

      Yea, the majority of the meat is on the breast. The "thighs" have some meat on it, but it's like eating a small meat lolipop.

    • @kendlerkendler2667
      @kendlerkendler2667 Před 2 lety +6

      How do they taste? Like chicken?

    • @abu_alazm
      @abu_alazm Před 2 lety +26

      @@kendlerkendler2667 Not really, it has a distinct taste that I would compare more to ducks or quails.

    • @75aces97
      @75aces97 Před 2 lety +12

      I figured these must be commonly eaten somewhere. I'd say the only reason we don't commonly eat them in the US has nothing to do with taste a d everything to do with stigma.

  • @ataarjomand
    @ataarjomand Před 2 lety

    Excellent short report. Thanks 🙏

  • @kenbellchambers4577
    @kenbellchambers4577 Před 2 lety +6

    The Wompoo Pigeon is an Australian variety. It is startlingly colourful. It has red, blue, green, violet, yellow and red feathers. Their skin is bright yellow, and the flesh is also. Its call is a soft 'wom-poo' sort of sound. Sometimes this is preceded by a strange gargling sound. Oz is blessed with quite a few different types of pigeon. There are Brown's, Flock Pigeons, Wonga's, which are almost twice the size of a common pigeon, and they are many more types also. In Egypt, large cone-shaped pigeon cotes were made for keeping pigeons. The manure was collected as the droppings fell from the nests inside the cones, and the squabs, baby pigeons, were eaten. They were the babies that were pushed out of the nest by their brothers or sisters, so they would have died anyway. Free meat!!

    • @larbi1075
      @larbi1075 Před rokem

      Please any negative effect of killing white dove for ritual

  • @lucasduque8289
    @lucasduque8289 Před 2 lety +140

    10:04 I love how that pigeon had to stop and turn their arse to poop down to the street. It's like they want to poop on someone.

    • @krankarvolund7771
      @krankarvolund7771 Před 2 lety +34

      I guess it's more "Hey, I walk there everyday, better not poop here" XD

    • @mcfarofinha134
      @mcfarofinha134 Před 2 lety +20

      It's probably more like, "hey, I sleep here, better not shit where I sleep"

    • @MrSweeperUSA
      @MrSweeperUSA Před 2 lety +2

      Warning: they have perfect aim

    • @holokyttaja5476
      @holokyttaja5476 Před 2 lety +1

      Why would it poop on the ledge it is walking on? Of course it is going to poop on the ground

    • @lucasduque8289
      @lucasduque8289 Před 2 lety +2

      @@holokyttaja5476 guys, it's a joke...

  • @sarkozygaming3629
    @sarkozygaming3629 Před 2 lety +37

    10:12 NOOOOOOO

  • @donalddurham7999
    @donalddurham7999 Před 2 lety +3

    Love these videos, this one and the buffalo video are fascinating.
    What about crows and ravens...or the crop culture impact or the Chinese swallow.

  • @jace5612
    @jace5612 Před 2 lety +3

    With the skyrocketing prices of Beef, Chicken and Pork, I've keeping a close eye on the doves in my back yard. Thanks Adam Ragusea!

  • @Manko_Panko
    @Manko_Panko Před 2 lety +39

    I always thought it was funny that people were calling pigeons nasty and unsafe to eat but still ate chicken.

  • @bluecircle06
    @bluecircle06 Před 2 lety +209

    Imagine being a pigeon, and hearing a random guy talking about your ancestors, and how good you taste. Damnnn.

    • @randomdude-su5yk
      @randomdude-su5yk Před 2 lety +8

      Harold: Aye Jim you hear that guy? I have no idea what he's talkin bout
      Jim: He is talking about how we are very tasty

    • @SomeRandomUser
      @SomeRandomUser Před 2 lety +11

      Or just chilling in the park and some random guy pushing a baby stroller picks you up and snaps your neck

  • @royharel2147
    @royharel2147 Před 2 lety +3

    10:13 HE SAID THE THING!

  • @marcusklaas4088
    @marcusklaas4088 Před 2 lety

    Excellent guest on this episode!

  • @Neltharak
    @Neltharak Před 2 lety +214

    "I guarantee it is making some french person real excited right now"
    ... Yeah. I come from the southwest of france, where hunting wild pigeon is still a thing and holy moley that looks delicious. I've had pigeon since i was 5 and this one gets my seal of approval. Although here, the "traditional" way to make it is "salmi de palombe", a sort of coq-au-vin way to make it. Hey if you wanna try something new i advise it. That and the rest of the cuisine du sud-ouest. Be warned though, it is not the most diet-friendly.

    • @PigeonKingdomBd
      @PigeonKingdomBd Před 2 lety +2

      very nice video
      love from pigeon kingdom bd

    • @BruceS42
      @BruceS42 Před 2 lety +2

      Isn't the man point of coq-au-vin that you can start with an old, tough bird, and by slow, wet cooking turn it into tender meat? I'm tempted to ask what pigeon tastes like, but have found that each new meat I try is distinct, hard to describe to those who haven't had it. I *think* I can get "squab" at a local Whole Foods kind of store, so at some point I need to try it.

    • @boiledelephant
      @boiledelephant Před 2 lety +1

      @@BruceS42 For what it's worth, I've eaten wild pigeon breast and it was really good. I expected it to be super tough and gamey, but it wasn't. We pan fried it in butter. It's a lot of mess if you don't know an efficient and quick way of cleaning the birds, though. We knew nothing and cleaned them like a chicken, plucking all the feathers, which takes AGES (and was totally pointless in the end).

    • @BruceS42
      @BruceS42 Před 2 lety +1

      @@boiledelephant I knew a guy who hunted ducks, and he said the breast was the only thing worth bothering with on them. No plucking, cleaning, etc., he'd just split it down the breastbone, reach in and tear (or maybe cut) out the breasts. I bet the same approach would work for pigeons, you'd just need more of them. And now I'm imagining that---catching some wild pigeons, harvesting the breast meat, pan frying them, maybe with some mushrooms.

    • @b.a.erlebacher1139
      @b.a.erlebacher1139 Před 2 lety +4

      I've eaten adult pigeons that were roosting in a rural barn. Almost all the meat is in the breast, so it makes sense to just skin that part, remove it, and feed the rest to the cats and dogs. Adult pigeon breast is a dark purple color, darker than liver, and incredibly tough. You have to either stew it very long and slow, or pressure cook it, else it's harder to eat than chewing gum. Urban pigeons don't have to fly as much to find food, so may be less tough, but considering their lifestyle I wouldn't be surprised to find that they are full of heavy metals and miscellaneous toxic stuff.

  • @nbshftr
    @nbshftr Před 2 lety +270

    10:12 I used to think my life was a tragedy, but now I realize it's a comedy.

    • @bronzeactual2652
      @bronzeactual2652 Před 2 lety +33

      There are more pigeons WHERE you say?

    • @adityamohanty9474
      @adityamohanty9474 Před 2 lety +24

      amogus

    • @BoP
      @BoP Před 2 lety +20

      when the pigeon is SUS

    • @thidderreal
      @thidderreal Před 2 lety +3

      I also timestamped that. Real SUSSY ain't it.

    • @brianz5011
      @brianz5011 Před 2 lety +3

      I knew that there was a comment like this lmfao, as soon as I heard pigeons among us I scrolled to the comments

  • @fastbulbous9400
    @fastbulbous9400 Před rokem +1

    Sorry to correct you, but in french there is a distinction between doves and pidgeons. A dove we would call a colombe, and pigeon is "pigeon". Indeed, pigeons are somewhat of a traditional food of france, although it is not so popular now. I personnally love the lean and slightly gamey taste of pidgeons. If i am in the mood to cook for a whole afternoon, i love a pidgeon pastilla, a traditionnal moroccan sweet pie using brick leaves. It's wonderful, although pideons are small and very tedious to carve into the filling of the pie.

  • @Tobberoth
    @Tobberoth Před 2 lety +3

    As a swede, I was surprised about the comment on squab being of scandinavian origin, never heard anything like it. Indeed, merriam webster says it comes from dialectal swedish, but even in SAOB (basically the official dictionary of historical swedish) theres not a lot of info. Its dialectal and generally refers to thin soup, apparently.

  • @zxqwerxz
    @zxqwerxz Před 2 lety +83

    I was waiting for a name drop, "Cher Ami", or 'dear friend' in french. A homing pigeon and veteran of world war 1. His company was pinned and found themselves being shelled by friendly artillery. Cher Ami was shot by a German solider but managed to fly back despite being shot through the breast, blind in one eye and having one leg hanging only by a tendon.

    • @sandrastreifel6452
      @sandrastreifel6452 Před 2 lety +14

      “Cher Ami” one of the best known military animal heroes. He was awarded the “Croix de Guerre” and the “Animals in War and Peace Medal of Bravery”

    • @steenystuff1075
      @steenystuff1075 Před 2 lety +1

      @@sandrastreifel6452
      Best known? I've never heard of it. 😬

    • @IAmGodHimself777
      @IAmGodHimself777 Před 2 lety +1

      Never heard of him.

    • @zxqwerxz
      @zxqwerxz Před 2 lety +12

      @@IAmGodHimself777 Well, now you have! If you're in the USA, you can see him on display in the Smithsonian in DC.

    • @IAmGodHimself777
      @IAmGodHimself777 Před 2 lety +1

      @@zxqwerxz never even been to the USA.

  • @ortlinde1777
    @ortlinde1777 Před 2 lety +403

    Adam: "Pigeons are tasty birds."
    Timmie: "And i took that personally."

  • @stevegabbert9626
    @stevegabbert9626 Před 2 lety +2

    In 92' I went to Hong Kong, Macau, and China and ate pigeon many times. It really was fantastic. I'd order it all the time if the restaurants put it on the menu.

  • @marklaurence2846
    @marklaurence2846 Před rokem

    Lived with relatives for a couple of years, they raised squab for the market, (near Pleasanton Ca.) There was always a certain percentage of squab that had a visual defect of some sort that could not be brought to market, so squab was a regular menu item. Yum. Nothing with feathers can beat squab. Wish I could afford to buy it now. 🤓 Enjoyed the video, never new most to the info presented.

  • @TJStellmach
    @TJStellmach Před 2 lety +101

    When my Dad was growing up, pigeons would get into the barn, going for the feed stored there. He and my uncles would go bag some, and it was pigeon soup for dinner.

  • @MarvinTurner
    @MarvinTurner Před 2 lety +411

    This would have had perfect timing at the start of the pandemic. Imagine if folks were hunting pigeon from their porches instead of baking sourdough 🤔

    • @TheTheoser
      @TheTheoser Před 2 lety +3

      No

    • @MarvinTurner
      @MarvinTurner Před 2 lety +25

      @@TheTheoser I kid, but it would have fit in with the whole subsistence and survivalist theme.

    • @dianaanonymous5794
      @dianaanonymous5794 Před 2 lety +15

      eurgh...but it feels like it could happen. i can almost imagine people documenting it to post on tiktok as part of a trend.

    • @MarvinTurner
      @MarvinTurner Před 2 lety +10

      @@dianaanonymous5794 That's exactly the joke lol

    • @MrCrashDavi
      @MrCrashDavi Před 2 lety

      +

  • @gyopofromthe2013
    @gyopofromthe2013 Před rokem +1

    That ending, "You do you~" Killed me Lmao 😂

  • @pigeonlady3525
    @pigeonlady3525 Před 2 lety

    The NPA is the National pigeon association.. they hold the yearly “pigeon pageant” called the Grand National. Pigeon people from
    ALL over the world attend.. last year there was over 5,000 birds shown.

  • @ancientwonder7812
    @ancientwonder7812 Před 2 lety +17

    I come from Egypt, where pigeons are a very popular dish.
    It is stuffed with spices herbs and rice, then boiled and fried till crispy skin, you can probably down like 4 of these birds before feeling full.
    Extremely delicious and I really recommend people to try it if they visit Egypt.

  • @Saltedchipps
    @Saltedchipps Před 2 lety +86

    My neighbor in Syria used to hunt and eat pigeons and I miss him he was a very nice man, he's ok btw

    • @FaithFacts
      @FaithFacts Před 2 lety

      What happened to him?

    • @imbi9580
      @imbi9580 Před 2 lety +2

      Hope he’s ok. Seems like a nice man according to you

    • @Saltedchipps
      @Saltedchipps Před 2 lety

      @@FaithFacts as I said, he's ok he lives in a safe place

    • @Saltedchipps
      @Saltedchipps Před 2 lety

      @@imbi9580 he is! He was a friend of my dad and me and my friend would sometimes go there with my dad hehe

    • @Mothobius
      @Mothobius Před 2 lety

      @@Saltedchipps How is he nice? Wouldnt he shoot you?

  • @Milkman-bu9es
    @Milkman-bu9es Před 2 lety

    So neat to watch a CZcamsr who goes to locations I recognize to talk about cool stuff

  • @madmanmortonyt4890
    @madmanmortonyt4890 Před rokem +1

    I recently learnt that I have family who owns a small pidgeon farm. Such beautiful birds!

  • @fishroy1997
    @fishroy1997 Před 2 lety +382

    Me: Let’s see what Adam is going to talk about today.
    Adam: Ever wonder about eating pigeons?
    Me: I’ve thought about this nonstop for the last 10 nanoseconds. Please educate me

    • @jiliciar.1423
      @jiliciar.1423 Před 2 lety +4

      😀 Honestly I was thinking about this a few hours ago. 🙂

    • @shinyramen
      @shinyramen Před 2 lety

      I capture pigeons for fun

    • @patp3634
      @patp3634 Před 2 lety

      @@shinyramen Illegal

    • @patp3634
      @patp3634 Před 2 lety

      @@shinyramen Illegal

    • @TheSlavChef
      @TheSlavChef Před 2 lety +1

      When you are defending Stalingrad, you start eating anything.

  • @SkeletonCreeper03
    @SkeletonCreeper03 Před 2 lety +61

    10:13 adam’s being sussy

  • @grimmquinn2003
    @grimmquinn2003 Před rokem +4

    I honestly find pigeons to be so beautiful. If you're in a Walmart parking lot waiting on someone to get done with grocery shopping and you're in the car waiting, they're fascinating to watch. I actually remember one coming up to window and just STARING at me. And they are truly beautiful birds.

  • @masonjarhillbilly
    @masonjarhillbilly Před 2 lety +2

    I worked a long way from my house and lived in my camper at a RV park during the work week. I was going pigeon hunting at a dairy on my weekend off. Offered to bring some back for one on my neighbors. They declined. I brought back about 30 breasts and left about 75 at the house. A few weeks later I offered them dinner. Rock dove was on the menu. They enjoyed eating the Rock dove. I gave them about 15 breasts and showed them how to cook it. I brought them a bunch more. Finally told them what it was about a year later, pigeon.

  • @kated442
    @kated442 Před 2 lety +94

    When I was a little kid, I thought pigeons’ tail feathers were really pretty so I called them “angel birds”

    • @alexpetrov5461
      @alexpetrov5461 Před 2 lety +22

      That's actually very sweet. When I was little I tried to catch them because I wanted a pet pigeon, probably a good thing that I was never able to catch up to them.

  • @_DeathDreams_
    @_DeathDreams_ Před 2 lety +121

    10:13 When the columbiform is strange-looking

  • @markgreiser464
    @markgreiser464 Před 2 lety +1

    My Great Grandmother used to send the Great granddad out to hunt them, in Charleston, WV. Back then it was nothing to see People on the Bus, going here and there, with their weapons to go hunting. So, he would go to the edge of Town and pop Pigeons. She never called them Pigeons, though. They were referred to , as Squab. Bon Appetit!

  • @sally2578
    @sally2578 Před rokem +1

    Growing up we had a dovecote (palomar). We fed the pigeons cracked corn that we bought in large sacks. It was one of my chores to feed the pigeons by throwing a few handfuls of the corn on top of the garage’s corrugated metal roof in the late afternoon. Pigeons were a part of our menu rotation of proteins. It was delicious but my friends thought we were barbarians.

  • @douglassmalls6934
    @douglassmalls6934 Před 2 lety +77

    I never noticed anything wrong with eating pigeons, at least those that aren't in the city eating our trash. I have always shot doves in my back yard and ate them and always thought it was weird that people saw a difference between doves and pigeons. If pigeons ever landed in my yard I would have shot and ate them all the same since they are just doves when it comes to eating them. Also dove breast wrapped in bacon is amazing.

    • @apricotcotlet197
      @apricotcotlet197 Před 2 lety +1

      Urban pidgeons are just as safe as the ones in your back yard.

    • @mossowski96
      @mossowski96 Před 2 lety +18

      @@apricotcotlet197 not really. Depends on where you live. In more polluted regions (like heavy industry centers, developing countries or simply cities in which people let the garbage pile up) pigeons carry lots of parasites and diseases (in Central Europe for instance). However in cleaner areas they're fine and quite tasty.

    • @Wildschwein_Jaeger
      @Wildschwein_Jaeger Před 2 lety +1

      Needs bacon because it is so lean.

    • @Antiquirom
      @Antiquirom Před 2 lety +2

      Doves are also nice pets. My mum used to have one

    • @shadmanhasan4205
      @shadmanhasan4205 Před 2 lety +3

      My father used to have pet pigeons and would frequently play with them... they would go out back in the environment... the come back home with a spouse if they were single. It's also a delicacy/common food depending on the localities

  • @yaacovisakov3565
    @yaacovisakov3565 Před 2 lety +12

    10:13 I can't escape

  • @jason.s.music.
    @jason.s.music. Před rokem +2

    My Great grandma and grandma from my dad’s side always tell stories of how they used to have a pigeon coop in their neighborhood that all the neighbors would occasionally use to eat the pigeons. Never really even thought about it being weird due to those stories although I’ve never ate a pigeon myself. Didn’t know there was such a taboo against it now

  • @redsunrises8571
    @redsunrises8571 Před rokem +1

    We just gonna ignore 0:10 where he said "used for food and... Other various other vital functions" while showing us the sus hole were the head used to be

  • @eugenebebs7767
    @eugenebebs7767 Před 2 lety +580

    My first thoughts: "Is that the legendary 11'8" Bridge? No... :("

    • @daltonriser1125
      @daltonriser1125 Před 2 lety +31

      Nope that bridge you are thinking of is in a different state Durham, north Carolina

    • @cobytang
      @cobytang Před 2 lety +54

      You mean the can opener bridge?? Legend

    • @mauz791
      @mauz791 Před 2 lety +10

      Scalping trucks truly is great entertainment

    • @SirWussiePants
      @SirWussiePants Před 2 lety +9

      We have a 10'09" bridge in Syracuse that has decapitated many a truck. Firstly, those things are bears to continue to be abused by this kind of impact and keep on ticking (or, more appropriately, to keep on truckin'). Secondly, if 10 feet is that bad, 8 foot is crazy. You can jump up to it!! My God

    • @davelauren5009
      @davelauren5009 Před 2 lety

      I also thought that lmao

  • @ShavaNerad
    @ShavaNerad Před 2 lety +560

    When I was in my late teens, a Vermont rural kid in Boston, I mentioned to a group of friends who were hanging out near the Boston Public Library that it seemed a pity they had all these pigeons and no one eating the babies. After a bit of EWWW! went by, they asked if people really ate pigeons?
    Generally the young ones, I told them, they're called squabs.
    Some of them had heard that term.
    Long story short, this led to an amazing expedition across the rooftops of Boston, seeking out and -- yes -- wringing the necks of many squabs. Because of the risk of mites, we skinned them rather than plucked them, which meant we had to use wet heat and make a stew rather than roasting (which would have made them way to dry, without the subcutaneous fat).
    The activity was sufficiently adventurous, and the end product tasty enough, that this was repeated several times.
    Who says MIT students are boring? :)

    • @randalllaue4042
      @randalllaue4042 Před 2 lety +2

      Red meat like a Dinosaur!!!!

    • @Mothobius
      @Mothobius Před 2 lety +1

      Why did you kill the babies? Could of let them live a little first.

    • @TJStellmach
      @TJStellmach Před 2 lety +76

      @@Mothobius It's discussed in the video. They're both tastier and much easier to catch before they've started to fly.

    • @Mothobius
      @Mothobius Před 2 lety +1

      @@TJStellmach yea but that's like taking the babies from a mother. In deer hunting you wouldn't shoot a mother with a baby.

    • @ShavaNerad
      @ShavaNerad Před 2 lety +104

      @@Mothobius Pigeons breed all year, there will be plenty of squabs all year. If you eat lamb or veal those are babies. If you're eating chicken, broilers are slaughtered at 6-7 weeks old.
      If you don't eat meat, you should think it's bad whether or not they are babies.

  • @pschensk
    @pschensk Před 2 lety

    What a great channel!

  • @JohnSmith-fd7dl
    @JohnSmith-fd7dl Před 2 lety

    The more videos I watch, the more I enjoy your channel.

  • @tic857
    @tic857 Před 2 lety +15

    Ever since I was a kid I thought that city pigeons would be easy to catch and eat, as an adult, my dad even said "pigeon eggs are delicious', and to this day I still have the thinking of "If I ever become homeless I would seek out all the underpasses, catch and eat pigeon...and I would probably not get in trouble because they're not protected under the migratory bird act. And I bet it would taste good with all the garlic mustard plants growing everywhere.

    • @Aatell764
      @Aatell764 Před rokem +2

      When I was homeless and without a vehicle I smuggled a pellet rifle down to the river near our town and hunted squirrel and rabbit. I spent what little money I had on canned vegetables to eat with them. Being homeless can be very fun, albeit rough. Some of my most cherished memories.

  • @chapter4travels
    @chapter4travels Před 2 lety +54

    An interesting thing he left out was that the squabs were tied to keep them from leaving the Dovecote. The farmer could access the back of the nesting box from inside the middle of the dovecote, open a little door and tie the baby squab inside. This way it could not leave the nest, yet the parent birds would continue to feed them. This meant a reliable supply of extra fat and juicy squabs.

    • @MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou
      @MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou Před 2 lety +7

      That's fucking sad.

    • @cat-.-
      @cat-.- Před rokem +2

      @@MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou not more sad than manually induced fatty liver on a poor goose

    • @MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou
      @MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou Před rokem +5

      @@cat-.- Most of our treatment of animals we eat is sad. Even the way we kill fish is extremely painful for the fish. The only animals I don't feel too bad about eating are the dumb ones like oysters.

    • @seanseoltoir
      @seanseoltoir Před rokem +5

      @@MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou -- The purpose of life is to be at the top of the food chain... For the most part though, humans prefer animals that eat plants instead of other carnivores... As such, in a pinch, all those vegans / vegetarians are a potential food source... Unfortunately though, they tend not to have much meat on their bones... :(

    • @MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou
      @MayTheSchwartzBeWithYou Před rokem +1

      @@seanseoltoir Sociopath. Get help.

  • @watts300
    @watts300 Před 2 lety

    I ordered a 10” with your code. Thanks.

  • @vitosanto3874
    @vitosanto3874 Před 2 lety +1

    As life long pigeon flyer ,70 years l think I know a little more about pigeons than the Commentator the pigeons he was referring to that lived under the railroad bridge are feral, and are not really pigeons the are actually Doves and first cousins to pigeons,It took countless years of breeding and cross breeding to get the type of pigeons that fanciers like myself keep. The types are to numerous to mention. The type that lives under bridges and in the wild cannot be tamed ,even when raised in captivity once released they simply revert back to the wild. It is interesting to note that if the fancy breeds are not kept with their own breeds after 4or 5 generations the young will look like the feral birds ,eg. Grey, blue, black, etc. Thank You.