When a pair of Peregrines were first seen at St Albans Cathedral early in 2022, I constructed a nest tray and placed it at high level on a ledge there. This was taken to by the birds almost immediately. Following this a Peregrine chick hatched for the first time on the Cathedral, in May of that year. As a licensed bird-ringer/nest recorder and holder of a government license to visit the nests of this specially protected species, I ringed the young female bird which was seen to successfully fledge the nest in late June of 2022. We were then delighted to see the Peregrines return to breed again in 2023, 2024 and 2025 and despite a well-publicised incident of their eggs being destroyed in April 2025, they raised three young in each year over that period.
On Friday, 29 May 2026, with a brood of three well-developing chicks in the nest tray, I went with colleagues to the nest and carried out the ringing of them, just three weeks after they had hatched. We know from the webcam live-stream that the parents have fed and looked after them well, particularly during the existing period of hot weather, so when we checked them we saw that they were all in good condition. We fitted a ring on each of their legs. One is a British Trust for Ornithology metal ring, a bit like a license tag, the other is a larger ring which is coloured Orange with Black lettering which means we’ll be able to track them in years to come.