Three Peregrine Falcon chicks have successfully hatched on St Albans Cathedral, over the weekend.
The first sightings were of two fluffy, white chicks, around 2am on Saturday 9 May, another hatched later that same day, and one egg remains on the nest. It is possible that a further chick may appear within the next couple of days, however some eggs are infertile and do not hatch. The four eggs are a record number for the St Albans Peregrine pair, with three eggs having been laid each year since 2023. In 2022, the birds first year of breeding only two eggs were laid, one of which failed to hatch.
The pair of Peregrine Falcons at St Albans Cathedral have captured the public’s interest since that first chick in 2022. Curiosity in the birds, and their growing family, has been further heightened since a live webcam was installed on their nest tray in 2023. The webpage received over half a million views last year. Live Peregrine Watch events, run by Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust and the RSPB St Albans Local Group, have also added to the community’s delight in watching the birds through telescopes and binoculars, in the Abbey Orchard, with volunteers providing information on the falcons – the fastest creatures on earth.