
Sample nests were found after a Russian glide bomb knocked down a tree in Donbas.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works .
Apocalyptic bird nest.A Russian glide bomb knocks down a tree in Donbas. From the shattered branches rolls out a tiny bird’s nest.Made of drone fiber-optic cable.Source: Oleg Malchenko pic.twitter.com/NWzLyv0hla June 6, 2026
Example photos of these optical fiber nests were shared on Twitter/X by a Ukrainian civil society leader and anti-corruption advocate, Olena Tregub. She called the carefully woven avian construction an “apocalyptic bird's nest” and credited Oleg Malchenko as the photographer. We can’t say how widespread such nests are, they are the first we’ve seen, but birds can be quite enterprising when nest building and choosing the best materials.
Some background to the finding was given by Tregrub. “A Russian glide bomb knocks down a tree in Donbas,” said the former Ukrainian government official. “From the shattered branches rolls out a tiny bird’s nest. Made of drone fiber-optic cable.”
Imagery showing acres of fields strewn with wisps of optical fiber are one of the sad signatures of the current Russia-Ukraine war . To make no-fuss jam-proof drones both sides have been using optical fiber tethered drones to target their foes.
Russian-made Shahed drones are ‘disintegrating in the air before reaching their targets’ due to shoddy manufacturing, video shows
Ukraine’s new AI-guided laser destroys Shahed suicide drones in seconds from 3.1 miles away
Fiber internet provider says it can detect leaking water pipes using existing infrastructure, prevented loss of 2 million liters a day over three months
In October last year we reported on a Ukrainian invention utilizing rotating barbed wire barriers to snag, rip, and disable any fibers left in the wake of drones flying over them. Another example of ingenuity in this David vs. Goliath conflict.
In December, we reported on the tethered drone range of Russian FPVs being significantly boosted by a grey-zone Chinese partnership. This tech collaboration between communist nations resulted in the production of fiber optic spools delivering as much as 65km (~40.4 miles) of tethered range. That was an advance of previously seen Ukrainian tethered drones reaching 42km (~26 miles).
Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.
Key considerations
- Investor positioning can change fast
- Volatility remains possible near catalysts
- Macro rates and liquidity can dominate flows
Reference reading
- https://www.tomshardware.com/networking/SPONSORED_LINK_URL
- https://www.tomshardware.com/networking/ukraines-birds-adapt-to-battlefield-environment-weaving-optical-fiber-nests-for-warmth-canny-feathered-friends-repurpose-scraps-of-this-spun-off-insulator-material#main
- https://www.tomshardware.com/subscription
- Levelplay shows off magnetically attached fans that are reversible, connect via pogo pins and USB-C – plus an AIO that trades a screen for a big knob
- Gigabyte Z890 Aorus Elite Wifi7 Plus Motherboard Review: Cost-conscious refresh board delivers (almost) all the fixens
- G.Skill explains how AMD EXPO ULL unlocks additional performance — expanded profiles allow memory makers to include subtiming tweaks for the first time
- ASML becomes Europe's most valuable company ever as analysts bet on higher EUV output — its market cap hit $674 billion this week
- Startup’s ‘miracle’ solid-state battery actually uses lithium-ion chemistry, according to third-party tests — Donut Lab raised $25M and is valued at $1.25B on w
Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.