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Soaring Swift

With a name like Swift, it's easy to understand why they aren't easy to photograph. Swifts can power themselves at 70 miles per hour, even faster when they are in a stoop. They fly around with their beaks open catching insects which they store in a ball to bring back to their youngsters in the nest. If you look carefully you can see this bird has its beak open for feeding. Analysis of just 12 food balls revealed more than 300 species of insect and spider. It is thought that each Swift may catch 10,000 insects in a day, which is more (numerically) than any other British bird.

 

The other interesting thing about Swifts is that once they leave their nest, their feet won't touch the ground for two or three years until they nest themselves. By this time the young Swift will have made two or three return journeys to sub-Saharan Africa. They eat, drink, sleep and even mate on the wing, only landing when they nest. The oldest known Swift was ringed as a nestling in Switzerland and was caught back there 21 years later, by which time it was estimated to have flown perhaps 3 million miles.

 

The scientific name Apus apus comes from the Greek " a pous" meaning without foot. Swift legs are so small that it was once believed that they did not have any feet. If a Swift gets grounded it cannot spring back into the air like all other birds with normal sized legs. Several times I have found grounded Swifts and have saved their lives by launching them back into the air. An immensely satisfying thing to do.

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Uploaded on June 7, 2014
Taken on June 6, 2014