Wabomini acted like a demure female for 3 years and was treated as a female by Larry and Irving. A new rescued female added to the little flock brought on a startling change in behavior in Wabomini.
I have a theory first off your bird is a racing homer and in that breed of pigeons I believe due to selective and excessive breeding male and or female features and traits have breed out of them . Those features have been set aside for more racing desirable features like a pin tail or shorter wing bones for speed or tighter vent bones ect. It’s not easy to determine unless you have them genetically tested.
That could be true, but 3 of our other guys were downed racers and they act normally. However, selective breeding can bring out strange traits. I also had 3 pet geese as a teenager and one was a definite hermaphrodite who laid eggs and yet had a male organ pop out when the cloaca was pressed. He/she mated with the female goose while the other true male mated with him/her. We discovered this when he was isolated and on meds for a respiratory infection and my dad thought I was putting eggs in the pen to keep him company. Actually, he was laying the eggs, which was quite a shock to us and which also explained why we had always thought the female was laying an extraordinary amount of eggs each week.