29 April 2024

Cameras go live on Peregrine nest at Salisbury Cathedral

Peregrine cameras have gone live on the Salisbury Cathedral website, catching the courting couple on camera… and a new partnership for the season!

Since the middle of January, the Cathedral team has been monitoring activity on the South Tower balcony, where a pair of peregrines have staked their claim to the nestbox, a prime piece of peregrine real estate.

In the last week, their ‘courting’ behaviour has intensified, with the couple bowing and ‘chupping’ to each other on the nest—a sign that they are ready to settle down.

While this partnership is clearly thriving, another has been established this year between the Cathedral and RSPB South Wiltshire Local Group. For the first time since the nestbox was established in 2014, volunteers from the RSPB South Wiltshire Local Group are taking charge of a joint Cathedral and RSPB South Wiltshire Local Group Facebook page and helping to gather footage to share.

Peregrines bow to one another on the nestbox – a courtship ritual. (Images: Salisbury Cathedral)

The Cathedral will still show livestreams from the three cameras on its website; two set up to catch the action on the nestbox, and one set up at the other end of the balcony, which has been dubbed the ‘larder’ because that is where the adult peregrines often store spare food.

Live webcam: https://www.salisburycathedral.org.uk/discover/peregrine-falcons/peregrine-live-webcam/

Tony Goddard, RSPB South Wilts Local Group Leader said: “We are looking forward to the new season and are delighted to be extending our long-running partnership with the Cathedral.

Sue Walker, our communications and social media volunteer will be helping to manage a joint Cathedral-RSPB South Wiltshire Local Group Facebook page and will be responsible for collecting recordings and pictures from the nestbox, working alongside the Cathedral Press Office to share news and exciting footage.”

Granville Pictor from Wiltshire Ornithological Society said: “The nestbox has been going eleven years, so the site is well established and always provides interest and excitement to birdwatchers and livestream visitors alike.

It is a privilege to share the lives of these amazing raptors with people from across the globe, and a great way to raise awareness and involve people in wildlife conservation.”

To date, thirty peregrine chicks have fledged from the Tower, and thanks to their Darvic rings, Cathedral staff have been able to keep track of some of them:

  • This year Flo (orange colour ring TND) has been spotted at the nest site in Welwyn Garden City after breeding successfully there last year.
  • Osmund (blue colour ring YK) was spotted on the coast of Guernsey in 2023 and 2022.
  • Peter (blue colour ring GX) has successfully raised chicks in a Hampshire quarry for the last few years.
  • Sadly, after a reported sighting near Milton Keynes in January 2017, we have heard no more about Aveline (blue colour ring SC) and Pansy, who fledged in 2019 was found dead in 2020 in Pitton, Wiltshire.

Written by
Andy Munns
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Written by Andy Munns