1, collecting materials. An elastic stick (commonly known as a bow stick, you don't need much to catch birds, just a shrub with thick fingers for adults), a forked branch and several small wooden sticks.
2. Properly treat the materials, sharpen the bifurcated branches and drive them into the ground, and open a groove on the bifurcated branches.
3. Drive the forked branches into the ground, and don't be too high from the ground.
4. Insert an elastic rod in the back.
5. Make a loop and lasso the details.
6. Tie a small wooden stick to the bending needle, and one end is tied to the elastic rod.
7. Pull down the lasso, the rope is stuck on the bifurcated groove, and the stick is fixed as shown in the figure. Pay attention to the contact point close to the ground. In addition, the bird is light and the contact point must be small to ensure the sensitivity of the trap.
8. As shown in the picture, put some sticks at the contact point.
9. Put the lasso on the stick (the nylon rope used will twist, so I hold it down with something. ), noose, close to the bait. You don't have to pretend to catch a pheasant with a turtledove, just have bait.
When placing traps, don't destroy the local geographical environment at that time, don't pull out the weeds around, and don't loosen the soil around the traps. We should keep the original environment and let pheasants, pheasants, rabbits and wild boars be trapped by us. If we had destroyed the environment, those wild animals would have made a detour and wouldn't have entered the trap you set.