Practical Game-Preserving. 



128 



tedious process before the necessary number of the proper 

 birds required are secured. I have employed a far better 

 and more wholesale way of catching-up birds, which gives 



6 ft. 



Tig. 20. Plan of Pheasant-Catcher. 



little trouble and entails small expense. Of this I give a 

 plan and dimensions. It consists of a double open-ended 

 cage or pen (Fig. 20), constructed of wire-netting upon 



Fig. 21. Burgess's Pheasant-Trap. 



wooden or iron frame, thoroughly portable by one man, 

 and made to fold and pack away in a small space. 



This pheasant-catcher consists of a wire pen, 6ft. by 

 2ft. wide by 2ft. 6in. high, made of galvanised wire 

 netting attached to an iron or wooden framework. The 



