Our Photo Gallery
Good photos of Swifts have until now been rare. But recent activities in Swift study, especially by people with DIY colonies, combined
with the advent of the digital camera, have produced some great pictures.
Here are a few to whet your appetite! They show the amazing, daring, skilful and exciting nature of these birds, as well as their vast charm.
Need photos of Swifts for environmental purposes? We may be able to help: click here to e-mail London's Swifts
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The "Scanish Swift", a fossil Swift from 49 million years ago and
the oldest known Swift.
(Aegialornis szarskii, or Scaniacypselus szarskii)
This species measured about 13cm from head to tail, and had a
wingspan of about 33cm, rather smaller than our modern Swift.
It flew and hunted insects over the shallow tropical seas and
marshlands in the area that is now Hesse in Germany. It died in
flight, falling into the sea, and was preserved in the oil shales of
the Grube Messel.
Photo © Ulrich Tigges |
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This photo
shows an adult Swift in a typical, yet now fast-vanishing
nest place, the open eaves of an old building.
The
Swifts make their nest on the "plate",
the wooden beam that runs along the top of the outer
wall and in turn supports the rafters that hold
up the roof.
This eaves gap allows air to
enter and ventilate the loft area, reducing the
humidity that would otherwise cause rot and decay.
New buildings lack this feature, relying
on other means to ventilate the roof space, while
old buildings being renovated often have their eaves
blocked with grilles to keep all wildlife out.
Over
time this is proving fatal for Swifts' chances of
survival in the UK
Photo © Alan
Wadsworth
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A new Swift chick sleeps beside its parent. If it survives, this will
be the longest period of rest it ever knows.
Most of the rest of its life will be spent on the wing. If lucky, it may
live for 10 years, and in that time it will fly 20 times to and back
from Southern Africa.
The nest is basic, made from airborne debris, feathers, moss and
saliva. Sometimes Swifts don't make a nest at all. They just lay the
eggs on the bare surface.
Swifts usually raise no more than 2 chicks, with a family of just
one being quite common.
Photo © Ulrich Tigges |
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This excellent photo shows an adult Swift in level flight.
Look at the shape of the wing feathers, the long and forked tail,
the dark colouration and the paler throat, all features that help
you to identify Swifts.
The deep set eyes, bullet shaped head and long tapered wings are
adaptations essential for the Swift's life, spent in more or less
constant flight.
Photo © Tom Lindroos |
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This
young Swift was found exhausted and unable to fly
on Guernsey last summer. It was rescued by Margers
Martinsons and Nick Winship, nursed back to health by
the staff of the Guernsey Animal Shelter and released
to fly
off to Africa. Note the superb binocular vision,
the deep-set eyes, the small beak and, very well
shown here, the feet, with their three forward pointing
toes and claws sharp enough to cling to rock faces
and walls.
Photo © Margers Martinsons |
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Swifts
can often find places to nest under ill-fitting
pantiles on old roofs.
These
two photographs, taken near Lincoln, show a Swift,
its throat bloated with insect food collected in
the air for its chicks, returning to its nest place
beneath the tiles.
See
how the Swift is using its entire body as an air-brake
to stop its forward movement.
It will have approached the nest at speed, and must
decelerate rapidly to land safely.
The
body is held almost vertical, and the wings and
tail are spread out to present as big an obstacle
to the air as possible.
New
or renovated pantile roofs are easily adapted to
let Swifts nest in them, without any fuss or mess.
See our Nest
Places in Pantile Roofs
page for more photos and details.
Photo © Bill Ball |
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This
next photo shows the Swift landing. Forward movement
is limited to settling on its outspread feet, as
the tail is actually in contact with the tiles and
will be slowing forward movement to nil.
The
Swift will now scuttle on its very short legs beneath
the tiles to feed its young, then emerge very rapidly
to take off and fetch more food.
It
will continue to do this in a series of shuttle
flights for the 40 or so days it will take to rear
its chicks to the stage where they are perfectly
feathered, and can fly off straight to Southern
Africa for their first Winter.
Photo © Bill Ball |
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Two juvenile Swifts sit in their nest, almost ready to fly to Africa
for the winter.
Note the thin nest-lining of saliva and a few feathers (caught in
flight) that make the man-made nest cup comfortable.
Juvenile Swifts, like these, have a pale edge to the feathers of the
head and wings, that wears away as they mature.
Adults are all-dark, with a pale chin patch, difficult to see except in
bright sunlight; they are much darker than the juveniles.
Swifts can continue to use the same nest space for many years
precisely because, unlike other birds, they do not fill it up with
debris.
Photo © Erich Kaiser
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This
photo shows fascinating details of the Swift's aerodynamic
features. Note the alulae or "bastard wings"
sticking up from the normal wing surface about a
quarter way out from the body. These are fully controllable
by the bird, corresponding to the "slots"
used on aircraft, and give increased lift and manoeuvrability
at low speeds. The tail is here dipped to the bird's
right, showing how it is steering through the air,
a bit like the rudder on a boat.
Photo © Jonathan
Pomroy
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An
amazingly dramatic photo of an enraged Swift driving
off a rival from his nest space after a bitter fight.
Swifts will compete and contest for nest spaces,
the more so if there is a shortage of them. Fights
can last for hours, the combatants lying gripped
and struggling in each others' claws, until one
gives up and succeeds in getting away.
Photo © Louis-Philippe Arnhem
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A
handsome photo of a Swift in flight, giving good
views of its underside and especially its chin and
tail. You can see the pale throat, often impossible
to see in normal light, and also the sculptured
effect of the tail and body boundary.
Photo © Jonathan
Pomroy
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Two
Swifts in flight - a more exhilarating and satisfying
sight is hard to imagine. The sheer beauty, skill,
daring and vigour of these birds as they dash across
the sky is just amazing.
Photo © Marc Guyt / www.agami.nl
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Swifts
have to drink, and they have to do it in flight
as they cannot land on the ground, unlike the Swallows
and Martins who can drink at the water's edge if
they need to.
Swifts can choose between hunting
raindrops or skimming ponds. In windy weather they'll
probably choose the raindrops as the water surface
may well be too agitated to make the skimming technique
viable and safe.
In these stunning photos
Marc Guyt has captured in great detail the precision
and detail of the Swift's approach and (below) the
skimming flight only millimetres above the water's
surface.
Photo © Marc Guyt / www.agami.nl
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Contact!
The Swift is scooping up water at high speed, leaving
a white-water wake where its lower bill has cut
the surface.
A second later it will pull
up and climb into the sky, refreshed. Just how often
Swifts need to drink is not yet known, nor how they
manage to get by with limited water supplies on
migration across such arid areas as the Sahara,
the Sahel and the Kalahari.
It may be that
they choose coastal routes where there is a better
chance of rain, and some coastal marshes where the
water is sweet enough to be of use to them.
Maybe
someone is doing the research which will give us
the answers?
Photo © Marc Guyt / www.agami.nl
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Almost ready to fly off to Africa! A juvenile Swift looks out at the
world from its man-made nest box.
Once launched, it will fly non-stop for the next eighteen months
or more, before finding a mate, hopefully finding a nest site, and
trying to breed.
The chances of succeeding at all this are getting less every year,
as the supply of nest sites in modern towns and cities diminishes
when old buildings are re-roofed, and new Swift-proof ones
erected.
Photo © Ulrich Tigges |

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This fascinating photo shows a Pallid
Swift ( a very similar species that breeds mostly
around the Mediterranean) with a ball of captured
insects in its throat; note the bulge.
Swifts catch insects by pursuing and snatching, and when in
swarms of small insects, by just scooping them up, like Basking Sharks catching
plankton. The compressed insects are then carried to the nest and fed to the
chicks.
Swifts will travel immense distances to find food for their chicks.
Several years ago, when bad summer weather diminished insects
in Sweden, Swifts there moved en masse to Bavaria to gather
food.
To cope with this, Swift chicks can endure several days without food by initiating a
torpid state where their body temperature and activity fall to
minimal levels.
Photo © Terry Simms |
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A sight that is getting rarer every year as rebuilding and
refurbishment remove ever more nest places. A flock of Swifts
renews its social and territorial links, in fast screaming flight
above their nesting territory.
Note the amazing flexibility of their wings. This gives them
supreme control of the air, enabling Swifts to fly like no other
bird, much faster, with greater agility and grace.
Swifts display a variety of social flights, from low level screaming
flight of the birds nesting in just one or two streets, to big
late-summer get-togethers of the year-old non breeders from
several colonies. These are flown at much higher levels at dusk,
when they ascend to the heavens to sleep on the wing.
Swifts sleep in flight with their senses of place, windspeed and
direction alert. Gliding on the breeze, they compensate for wind
drift and change of direction to stay in place above their home
territory. At dawn they descend rapidly back to lower levels, to fly
and feed around their familiar territory.
Photo © Jorge Sanz |

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A fine study of a Swift in flight. The forked tail is
rather
different from those of the Swallows and Martins with which the Swift,
while no relative, is often confused.
In this
photo the pale throat is very obvious. It is often
impossible to see when looking at Swifts flying
fast overhead in shady urban streets, or against
a bright sky, when the birds appear uniformly dark.
Swifts show extreme sophistication in their aerodynamic design. See
how the
tiny feet are completely retracted
into the plumage so they cannot interfere with the
air-flow over the streamlined surface of the bird
and create "drag".
The outer wings create leading edge vortexes which greatly
enhance lift and improve flight stability. Swifts
share this capability with the most advanced fighter jet aircraft,
only they have had it for over 50 million years!
Photo © Derek Brown |
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Two alert young Swifts sit in their man-made nest box.
Swifts have ultra-sensitive sight and hearing. Acute sensitivity to
pressure and airflow enables them to avoid dangerous weather.
They navigate by magnetic systems, backed up by a memory of
star maps, and are guided by a precise memory of their nest
location. They will reject a familiar nest if its hole is not found
within a couple of centimetres of its previous location.
They identify insect prey by the sound it makes, so avoiding
dangerous species, and identify their mate by call, not
appearance.
Photo © Ulrich Tigges |
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Coming in low and fast, a feeding Swift chases invisible insects
during 2004's plethora of huge aphid swarms.
The adult bird's pale throat patch is just visible.
Swifts will eat whatever insects are available, timing their
migrations to coincide with swarms of suitable species, such as
termites in Africa, and emerging aquatic fly species in Europe.
Photo © Martin Grund |
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A Swift reaches the apex of its climb, slowing to an aerodynamic
"stall", or stop, before falling into a dive. The purpose of this
manoeuvre is to check a possible new nest site.
The similarity between Swifts' flight and that of the most
demanding aircraft aerobatics is remarkable, though Swifts never seem to
turn upside down.
Watching them closely, you can see they always keep their heads
parallel with the ground, maintaining their orientation and
stability.
Photo © Ulrich Tigges
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Coming
in fast! A Pallid Swift does a rapid turn in the
air over Tarifa, Southern Spain. See how the tail
is dipped to act like a rudder, cutting the air
and forcing the bird into a turn. One wing is dipped
so the bird can pivot on it, while the
extended flat wing provides the lift that keeps
the bird in the air. The faster the bird flies,
the "tougher" the air will become, behaving
much like a liquid at the highest speeds.
The head is kept level with the horizon, whatever
the flight posture. This is to keep the
bird from becoming disoriented during rapid manoeuvres, and may correspond
to the "artificial horizon" used in aircraft.
It is a notable feature of all highly agile birds.
Note
the width of the Swift's mouth, well designed to
scoop up swarms of tiny insects in flight.
Photo © Terry Simms |
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A
common but often overlooked habit of Swifts is to
fly up a building's walls to have a look for suitable
nest places, or, having established a nest, to visit
the nestplace to feed the chicks.
That's
what seems to be happening here. There is probably
a nest under the ridge tiles (where the white droppings
are visible), and it's probably situated on one
of the brick-ends, a favourite spot for a Swift's
nest.
Once feeding the chicks, the Swifts
will shuttle back and forth with their balls of
insect food, making several visits a day each. They
may fly a very long way to collect this food, for
hundreds of miles if need be, or they may be lucky
and find all they need over the local gardens, parks
and reservoirs.
Photo © Marc Guyt / www.agami.nl
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Dashing
through the sky, a Swift feeds like a basking shark,
beak wide open to catch the swarms of tiny insects,
typically greenfly, tiny beetles and flying ants,
carried aloft on thermal currents.
Swifts
will also hunt and catch individual large insects.
They can tell between harmful and harmless insects,
differentiating between bees (which they won't eat)
and sting-free drones (which they will) by the
sound of their wing beats.
When you see Swifts
circling high in the sky, that's where the thermal
currents are, and the Swifts are there to feed on
the insects trapped in the warm rising air.
Photo © Derek Brown
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Blurred by speed, it's throat stuffed with food, this evocative
photo shows just how uncompromisingly the design of the Swift
is dedicated to high-speed agile flight.
This structure lets the Swift expend the least possible effort to
achieve the speed and flexibility that makes its totally aerial life
possible.
So effective is this, it is thought that Swifts can cross the
Mediterranean and the Sahara Desert, non-stop, without feeding,
at over 10,000 feet up, exploiting the cooler, calmer and
predator-free air found at this altitude.
Photo © Martin Grund |
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This superb photo shows a pair of Pallid Swifts, the
lighter-coloured southern Swift species. They breed on the
Western Mediterranean littoral and along the Persian Gulf, and occasionally
turn up in the UK.
Pallid Swifts spend the winter months in an area from West
Africa and the Sahel, across to the Sudan and Ethiopia, and so
have a much shorter migration than does the Common Swift.
Because of this they can spend longer in the breeding areas,
(from April to November in Southern France), and can raise two
broods. They like
rocky gorges and cliff faces as nest sites, preferring coastal or river valley
sites.
This species does wander. Pallid Swifts have been seen as far apart as Ireland and South Africa, demonstrating that their flying abilities
match those of the Common Swift.
Photo © Seyed Babak Musavi
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A stunning study of a Pallid Swift, flying through Bandar Abbas in
South-Western Iran on the Persian Gulf. The lighter colour
of the bird, so evident here, is best seen in brilliant sunlight.
On overcast days or in low evening light the birds can be almost
impossible to distinguish from the Common Swift. This has lead
to much confusion over the identity of individual birds, and even
the definition of the areas occupied by each species.
But it is thought that Pallid Swifts are doing well, with an increase
in their numbers, whilst the Common Swift is declining, especially
in Western Europe.
Photo © Seyed Babak Musavi |
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Another
fine photo of a Pallid Swift, seen here over Tarifa
in Southern Spain. There are some
slight visual differences apparent here differentiating
it from the Common Swift. The bird appears broader winged
and more plump.
More
reliable clues are the paler
colour, (seen best in very bright sunlight or from
above) and the slightly deeper tone of their calls.
Photo © Terry Simms |
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This close up of a young Swift's head, several times larger than
life size, shows the unique scale-like feathering, and the
streamlined shape, supporting high-speed flight.
Also evident are the bristles and feathers that protect the deep set
eyes from contact with air-borne debris, and damage from the
spiky legs and wing cases of insects eaten in fast flight.
The gape of the mouth is vast; it opens almost as wide as the
whole face, to give the Swift great scooping abilities when
feeding.
Photo © Ulrich Tigges |
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