<p class="caption2"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</SPAN></p>
<p class="caption2">Netting the Pigeons</p>
<p class="caption3 pmb2">By William Brewster, from "The Auk,"<br/>
a Quarterly Journal of Ornithology, October, 1889.</p>
<div class="dropcap">I</div>
<p class="p0"><span class="hidden">I</span>N the spring of 1888 my friend, Captain Bendire,
wrote to me that he had received news from a
correspondent in central Michigan to the effect
that wild pigeons had arrived there in large numbers
and were preparing to nest. Acting on this information
I started at once, in company with Mr. Jonathan
Dwight, Jr., to visit the expected "nesting" and
learn as much as possible about the habits of the
breeding birds, as well as to secure specimens of their
skins and eggs.</p>
<p>. . . Pigeon netting in Michigan is conducted as
follows: Each netter has three beds; at least two, and
sometimes as many as ten "strikes" are made on a single
bed in one day, but the bed is often allowed to "rest"
for a day or two. Forty or fifty dozen birds are a good
haul for one "strike." Often only ten or twelve dozen
are taken. Mr. Stevens' highest "catch" is eighty-six
dozen, but once he saw one hundred and six dozen captured
at a single "strike." If too large a number are
on the bed, they will sometimes raise the net bodily and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
escape. Usually about one-third are too quick for the
net and fly out before it falls. Two kinds of beds are
used, the "mud" bed and the "dry" bed. The former
is the most killing in Michigan, but, for unknown reason,
it will not attract birds in Wisconsin.</p>
<p>It is made of mud, kept in a moist condition and
saturated with a mixture of saltpeter and anise seed.
Pigeons are very fond of salt and resort to salt springs
wherever they occur. The dry bed is simply a level
space of ground carefully cleared of grass, weeds, etc.,
and baited with corn or other grain. Pigeons are peculiar,
and their habits must be studied by the netter if
he would be successful. When they are feeding on
beech mast, they often will not touch grain of any kind,
and the mast must be used for bait.</p>
<p>A stool bird is an essential part of the netter's outfit.
It is tied on a box, and by an ingenious arrangement
of cords, by which it can be gently raised or lowered,
is made to flap its wings at intervals. This attracts the
attention of passing birds which alight on the nearest
tree, or on a perch which is usually provided for that
purpose. After a portion of the flock has descended
to the bed, they are started up by "raising" the stool
bird, and fly back to the perch. When they fly down a
second time all or nearly all the others follow or
accompany them and the net is "struck."</p>
<p>The usual method of killing pigeons is to break
their necks with a small pair of pincers, the ends of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span>
which are bent so that they do not quite meet. Great
care must be taken not to shed blood on the bed, for
the pigeons notice this at once and are much alarmed
by it. Young birds can be netted in wheat stubble
in the autumn, but this is seldom attempted. When
just able to fly, however, they are caught in enormous
numbers near the "nestings" in pens made of slats. A
few dozen old pigeons are confined in the pens as decoys,
and a net is thrown over the mouth of the pen when a
sufficient number of young birds have entered it.</p>
<p>Mr. Stevens has known over four hundred dozen
young pigeons to be taken at once by this method. The
first birds sent to market yield the netter about one
dollar a dozen. At the height of the season the price
sometimes falls as low as twelve cents a dozen. It
averages about twenty-five cents.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span></p>
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