124 PHEASANTS 



tendency to keep close to home when they 

 do begin to hunt for themselves. 



The devices for the protection of nests 

 and sitting birds beyond the confines of 

 the rearing-field are many and various ; 

 most have but a short-lived efficacy. The 

 nests may be completely wired in with 

 netting, or a strand of the thin wire 

 known as * bouquet ' wire stretched across 

 each side of the nest to trip and scare the 

 marauder. Among simple devices the 

 luminous disk is probably the most 

 effective : set up about the level of a fox's 

 nose, two to a nest in a fence, three round 

 a nest in the open, these disks have been 

 found to answer their purpose well by 

 many who have given them an extended 

 trial. 



The site of a nest makes all the differ- 

 ence to its probable security, and it is well 

 to remember that artificially made nests 

 placed in suitable spots, with the added 

 inducement of a few dummy eggs, will 

 always attract pheasant hens, however 

 carefully they may be concealed, and that 



