122 PHEASANTS FOB COVEBTS AND AVIABIES. 



Give one sort of food at a time (just so much, tliat they eat 

 it clean up), and attendance every hour from the time you 

 commence to feed until shut up for the night. Change the 

 water repeatedly during the day." 



"With regard to the coops employed for the hens with 

 young pheasants, a form much recommended is one made 

 like a box, 3ft. long, 2ft. wide, and 2ft. high in front, sloping 

 off to 1ft. high at the back, and having a movable boarded 

 floor that may be employed if the ground be wet. The birds 

 ought to have a further space of about two yards square to 

 run in, fenced in by sparrow-proof wire netting. A good 

 coop of this kind is shown in the cut. The inclosed run, 

 which is proof against rats and sparrows, &c., affords a 

 sufficient space for the exercise of the young birds a day 



or two after hatching, after which the coops should be 

 placed without the wire runs in the spot where the young 

 birds are to be reared, the grass, if high, having been 

 mown around some short time previously, so that the 

 young shoots and tender clover may be growing for the 

 use of the birds. The advantages of these arrangements 

 have been very ably set forth by Mr. T. C. Cade, of Spondon, 

 Derby. He writes: "'There is a great saving of food, as 

 small birds are excluded by the wire netting ; and it is also 

 practicable to put down a good supply of food at night, so 

 that the young pheasants may be able to feed as soon as they 

 wake, and not be kept waiting, according to the usual plan, 

 for two or three hours during the long summer mornings 

 before they are let out. My birds are never shut in the coop 



