Durham Cathedral is protecting local wildlife by installing swift boxes 60ft above the ground in its iconic Central Tower.

Swifts, once common in the city of Durham, are now classified as Red under the Birds of Conservation Concern.

As part of the cathedral’s mission to protect wildlife and nature as St Cuthbert did, swift boxes have recently been installed within the Central Tower.

Following a donation by a local businessman, wooden, hand-made boxes were fitted against the windows in the Central Tower earlier this week.

The Northern Echo: Durham Cathedral team lifting the swift boxes into place inside the Central Tower. Picture: DURHAM CATHEDRALDurham Cathedral team lifting the swift boxes into place inside the Central Tower. Picture: DURHAM CATHEDRAL

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The boxes have been carefully designed to fit around the architecture of the building and provide an ideal nesting place for the swifts.

Maya Polenz, chief officer for property at Durham Cathedral said: “Conservation and caring for nature is very important to us at Durham Cathedral, so we’re delighted to be able to respond to this situation and install swift boxes to help these endangered animals.”

Each box contains multiple chambers featuring small platforms, something swifts prefer when deciding where to nest.

Attraction calls will also be played from near the boxes within the Tower to attract the swifts.

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Maya said: “The Cathedral’s joiners have been building the specially designed boxes over the past few weeks to ensure they are ideal for nesting swifts, as well as fitting precisely within the cathedral's intricate architecture. We’re looking forward to seeing how many swifts start to settle into the cathedral tower to build their nests and create a home. We’ve built in the opportunity to fit an unobtrusive wildlife camera in the future so we can monitor progress.”

Swift boxes in other churches have proven very successful in welcoming nests. The height of the towers make church belfries an ideal place for swifts to nest, due to the degree of seclusion. The ingress points, while large enough for the swifts, are actually small enough to exclude birds of prey, further protecting the swift population.

The project has been supported by a donation from local businessman, Edward Twiddy.

Edward said: “The sound and sight of swifts is an icon of summer. Their presence in the City sends a noisy and spectacular reminder that life returns each spring, but across the UK and much of Europe fewer and fewer of these tireless trans-continental visitors have been returning to raise the next generation. Needing little more than healthy insect populations and somewhere to nest, their demise should send a clear warning about what we are doing to the world around us.

“The cathedral is already home to many wonderful bird and bat species that enjoy the sanctuary of the towers and the cloisters; helping the swifts to come back year after year from Africa to find perfect nesting conditions felt like a small but right thing to do and I’m delighted that the Dean and everyone at the Cathedral responded so positively to the idea.”

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