A bird has been nesting in the gun of a World War Two Spitfire at Eden Camp
The pair of blue tits are raising their young inside the 20mm cannon of the decommissioned World War Two fighter aircraft at Eden Camp, near Malton.
The Spitfire is a static display aircraft and one of several restored heritage vehicles owned by the museum.
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Hide AdEden Camp has been closed to the public since March, and the local wildlife seem to be enjoying the peaceful atmosphere at the visitor-free site.
The site originally consisted of 33 accommodation and mess huts for prisoners of war, mostly Italians and some Germans. Polish servicemen were also based at the camp for a time. and many of the POWS were sent to local farms to provide labour.
After the war, the site became accommodation for farm workers, and later passed into agricultural use. In the 1980s, there were plans to turn it into a crisp factory before a group of former Italian inmates contacted the landowner to ask if they could visit. It was eventually decided to convert the remaining huts into a museum about World War Two, which opened in 1987.
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