Pigeon racers are mystified after hundreds birds disappeared in an area they have now dubbed the Bermuda Triangle. Pigeon racers are mystified after hundreds birds disappeared in an area they have now dubbed the Bermuda Triangle. Only 13 out of 232 birds released in Thirsk , North Yorkshire, on Saturday by a Scottish pigeon racing club made it back to Galashiels, Selkirkshire. It follows a summer on which hundred more have vanished in the same area. Keith Simpson, of the East Cleveland Federation, said pigeon racers across the region had all suffered massive losses since the season started in April - with many losing more than half of their birds. Some fanciers are considering stopping flying the birds until they establish why so many failed to return. Scottish pigeon racer Austin Lindores said: "When they fly down to the Thirsk, Wetherby and Consett area we call it the Bermuda Triangle because something always seems to happen. "This is not the first time it has happened in that area. I won't be racing there again." The loss of homing pigeons, which can be worth up to £200,000, has baffled experts, but the most popular theory is the abnormal number of summer showers, sending birds off course as they attempt to fly around the downpours. Unusually high levels of solar activity distorting magnetic fields and even signals from Menwith Hill spy base, near Harrogate , an electronic monitoring station, have also been blamed. |