48 PHEASANTS FOB COVEBTS AND AVIABIES. 



of yew, hollyj and privet, chiefly because no fallen berries are 

 to be found underneath tbem. But if a handful of barley, 

 peas, or beans be tbrown from time to time among tbe more 

 open- and taller rhododendrons, the pheasants will soon leam 

 to resort to them, after which some of the same fare may be 

 cast into the thicker parts, where the birds will soon find it. 

 In this way our beautiful rhododendron thickets near the 

 garden and mansion may be utilised for pheasants more than 

 heretofore. 



The late Mr. Charles Waterton, who protected every bird 

 in his domain, published the following details of his method 

 of preserving the pheasants at Walton Hall : — " This bird has 

 a capacious stomach, and requires much nutriment, while its 

 timidity soon causes it to abandon those places which are 

 disturbed. It is fond of acorns, beech mast, the berries of 

 the hawthorn, the seeds of the wild rose, and the tubers of 

 the Jerusalem artichoke. As long as these, and the corn 

 dropped in the harvest, can be procured, the pheasant will 

 do very well. In the spring it finds abundance of nourish- 

 ment in the sprouting leaves of young clover ; but from the 

 commencement of the new year till the vernal period, their 

 wild food affords a very scanty supply, and the bird will be 

 exposed to all the evils of the Vagrant Act, unless you can 

 contrive to keep it at home by an artificial supply of food. 

 Boiled potatoes (which the pheasant prefers much to those in 

 'the raw state) and beans are, perhaps, the two most nourishing, 

 things that can be offered in the depth of winter. Beans in 

 the end are cheaper than all the smaller kinds of grain, 

 because the little birds, which usually swarm at the place 

 where pheasants are fed, cannot swallow, them; and, if you 

 conceal the beans under yew or holly bushes, or under the 

 lower branches of the spruce fir tree, they will be out of the 

 way of the rooks and ringdoves. About two roods of the 

 thousand-headed cabbage are a most valuable acquisition to 

 the pheasant preserve. You sow a few ounces of seed in 

 April, and transplant the young plants 2ft. asunder, in the 



