The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Bird-loving lottery winners, including Lesley and Fred Higgins, delivered handmade nesting boxes to the Miley Nature Reserve to help with wildlife in Dundee.

- DAVID MEIKLE

Bird-loving lottery winners have donated nest boxes to help Dundee’s wildlife. Jackpot winners including Fred and Lesley Higgins, who won more than £57 million on Euromillio­ns in 2018, delivered the handmade boxes to the Miley Nature Reserve.

The boxes will be installed by the Scottish Wildlife Trust at the Miley and further locations around Scotland.

A further box with a built-in camera was delivered to Kingspark Primary School in Dundee where pupils will use it to keep an eye on nesting birds throughout the spring.

The Miley is part of a disused railway within walking distance of Dundee city centre.

The reserve’s hedgerows, trees and grassland provide a haven for urban wildlife.

Staff and volunteers at the Scottish Wildlife Trust, who created and continue to manage the nature reserve, hope the new boxes will quickly attract nesting songbirds.

Lesley Higgins said: “Fred and I are huge wildlife fans, so it was brilliant to be involved in building these nesting boxes.

“Making these boxes has been a welcome escape from the long lockdown months and knowing they’re going to a worthy cause has made creating them even more special.”

Fellow winners Jim and Pam Forbes from Tayport, who won £656,000 on Euromillio­ns in 2017, also visited the Miley to see the boxes installed.

Jim said: “Pam and I really enjoyed taking part in Operation Nestbox, as we nicknamed it. It was great for us to have something to focus on throughout lockdown and knowing that our endeavours will benefit birds is even better.”

Other winners who took part include Libby Elliot who won more than £2m on Lotto in 2012, Raymond Storey who scooped more than £1m on Euromillio­ns in 2014 and Ken and Jannette Wedgeworth from Dumfries & Galloway, who won £1m on Euromillio­ns in 2016.

Teams worked from home, taking inspiratio­n from the Scottish countrysid­e when decorating their boxes.

Chairman of the Scottish Wildlife Trust’s Angus and Dundee group, Jim Cook, said: “While the birds nesting in these boxes will be unaware they were built by a multimilli­onaire taskforce, we hope Dundee residents will visit the Miley to take a look.

“We’re so thankful to the winners for their hard work and to the longrunnin­g support from the National Lottery for the Scottish Wildlife Trust.

“Since its launch in 1994, more than £12.5m in National Lottery funding has helped the trust to deliver projects to protect threatened wildlife and support nature’s recovery.”

Nest box building is the latest volunteeri­ng project National Lottery winners have been involved with.

Since the start of the pandemic, winners have pooled their resources to create fresh vegetable planter boxes for schools and NHS workers, as well as knitting twiddlemuf­fs for people with dementia, making small garments for premature babies and creating Christmas angels for local charities.

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 ??  ?? MAKING A DIFFERENCE: Tayport Euromillio­ns winners Jim and Pam Forbes with colourful nest boxes for the Miley Nature Reserve, Dundee.
MAKING A DIFFERENCE: Tayport Euromillio­ns winners Jim and Pam Forbes with colourful nest boxes for the Miley Nature Reserve, Dundee.
 ??  ?? Fred and Lesley Higgins with their nest boxes.
Fred and Lesley Higgins with their nest boxes.

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