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Armando the racing pigeon sells for record $1.4 million

armando-pigeon.jpg
Armando the racing pigeon is seen in a photo/graphic created by the specialist Belgian pigeon fanciers' website Pigeon Paradise (pipa.be). Armando was sold to a bidder in China for a record-setting $1.4 million in an online auction. pipa.be

Brussels -- A star racing pigeon named Armando has fetched a record 1.25 million euros (about $1.4 million) in an online auction, Belgian media reported Sunday. The prized bird -- Belgian's best long-distance racer of all time according to those in the know -- was snapped up by a Chinese buyer for the princely sum that caused a flutter of excitement among fanciers.

Armando had been expected to break the previous record of 376,000 euros ($425,000) paid for a pigeon called Nadine -- but not by such a wide margin.

"Earlier this week it became clear that Armando would be the most expensive pigeon ever sold in an online auction," wrote the specialist website Pigeon Paradise (Pipa.be).

"However, no one expected that the magical cap of a million euros would be pulverised," it added. The final amount was 1,252,000 euros.

Pigeon Paradise did not say who had bought the pigeon, but according to the Belgian news agency Belga it was a Chinese buyer who will no doubt use his new acquisition to breed other champions.

Armando was just one of more than a hundred birds sold by respected Belgian breeder Joel Verschoot.

Verschoot's stable of pigeons is based in Ingelmunster, in the west of Belgium, and his online auction of his pigeons has been open for several weeks.

By Sunday, the family had sold 178 pigeons for around two million euros.

Verschoot told Pigeon Paradise that after a winning 2017 racing season, many people suggested he should retire Armando to "the breeding loft," but he decided to keep his bird flying, and in 2018, Armando took first place in one of the biggest races in Europe.

Homing pigeons are raced by releasing them sometimes hundreds of miles from home, with the first to make it back home winning.

Racing them is a tradition in Belgium, Britain, northern France and the Netherlands, although it has been going into decline.

But interest from Asian buyers in recent years has given the practice a new lease of life.

One of the highest profile pigeon fanciers in the U.S. is boxing legend Mike Tyson, who showed off his fondness for the birds and the sport in a 2011 TV show, which drew criticism from animal rights group PETA.

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