Where to find pheasants In the afternoon, divided into pairs, pheasants feed right there near the current location, most often on sunflower and wheat crops. By the evening, about four o'clock, the males begin to call to each other again. When they meet, they fight among themselves. The current of pheasants continues until mid-June. The roosters scream especially hard after the females sit on the eggs. It happens from about the middle of May. The male does not take part in incubation, at this time he shouts intensely and runs around in search of single females. The hen lays from 10 to 15 eggs. She makes a nest somewhere in the reeds or in the thick grass under a thorny bush. After twenty-five days of incubation, in the first half of June, the chicks hatch. They emerge from eggs in thick down and with stumps, that is, contour feathers that begin to develop; they quickly grow flight feathers, and then they can escape from enemies by flying up trees. In the second half of August, young males grow bright feathers of an adult outfit. Molting goes on quickly, and by October the pheasants finish it. The young birds that make up the brood stay together all summer and early autumn. From the end of September, and sometimes later, the broods of pheasants break up. Matured young pheasants feed in the fields and in thorns during the day, and at night they climb into bushes and weeds or spend the night on trees. Birds, being at night, often respond to any noise. The pheasant is a sedentary bird and always lives in the same places. Only in the case of strong persecution by a person, he moves to another, more peaceful place. This beautiful bird with white, beautiful, delicious meat has many enemies. The pheasant is being heavily exterminated, and in many areas where it was found several decades ago, now no one knows this bird. But in hunting farms it reproduces well, so now there is an opportunity to preserve and settle this valuable game.