Yorkshire Post

Falcons watched around the world

The progress of the peregrines in Wakefield Cathedral is followed by almost one million people online

- RUBY KITCHEN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

NESTING HIGH above Wakefield in the cathedral spire, a pair of peregrine falcons are attracting plenty of attention.

For six years, every move of these birds of prey has been captured on camera as they hatched and raised their chicks.

Now, as a new breeding season begins, anticipati­on is building as a global audience watches online with avid fascinatio­n.

Last year, nearly a million people in 57 countries around the world spent a total of 4.6 million minutes watching them live.

“They have built up quite a following,” said Francis Hickenbott­om, of the Wakefield Cathedral Peregrine Project, which runs live feeds of the birds and their daily activities.

“Perhaps because it’s the same pair, people get attached. “But we are all fascinated by nature’s life’s cycle and how it mirrors that of humans.

“So many people get in touch to say how wonderful it is to follow the progress of the birds in lockdown. “There is drama and it is often exciting stuff.”

There are two cameras on the spire at Wakefield Cathedral, one in the nesting box and one on the walls.

Everything is recorded – what they eat, when their eggs hatch and the first flights of their chicks.

Right now it is courting season and time to ready the nest. The first egg will arrive in the final week of March. In the first week of May, the first hatchling will appear.

A record is kept of what the birds eat by Mr Hickenbott­om and fellow volunteer Colin Booker and submitted every year to the Study of Urban Peregrines.

The male, still with his juvenile feathers, was the first at the cathedral site, proffering a pigeon for his older mate.

While little is known of her origins, his tag can be traced to a deconsecra­ted church in Sheffield, where Yorkshire’s first urban peregrines were recorded in 2012.

It took the Wakefield pair a year to settle but they have since raised 21 chicks, as well as a fosterling who fell from a nest at Hull’s KC Stadium.

Last month, there was news of a male born in Wakefield in 2019. He was sighted near Croxdale, three miles south of Durham, 72 miles from his birthplace.

Since the first lockdown, there has been a boom in watching online, said Mr Hickenbott­om.

It has continued, and grown, as travel restrictio­ns mean visitors can’t attend the cathedral where they normally watch the birds through binoculars.

And he believes that with many people at home, there has been a renewed interest in their surroundin­g landscapes and wildlife.

“One of the greatest joys over recent years is the return of the peregrine. Not only to their traditiona­l sites, on clifftops or monuments, but they have taken a liking to city buildings,” said Mr Hickenbott­om.

Peregrines are top predators, he explained. They indicate the health of an ecosystem, and their presence in Wakefield is a good sign.

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 ?? PICTURES: SIMON HULME/FRANCIS HICKENBOTT­OM ?? HOME UP HIGH: Left, the peregrine falcons on the spire at Wakefield Cathedral; above, Francis Hickenbott­om, of the peregrine project; below, chicks and eggs in the nest box; inset, the pair together.
PICTURES: SIMON HULME/FRANCIS HICKENBOTT­OM HOME UP HIGH: Left, the peregrine falcons on the spire at Wakefield Cathedral; above, Francis Hickenbott­om, of the peregrine project; below, chicks and eggs in the nest box; inset, the pair together.

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