It was a dank drizzly day and the small birds were ravenously hungry. Outside the Rose Garden Great Tits, Blue Tits and a Coal Tit gathered in a blossoming dogwood tree. The occasional thumps you hear are from one of them landing on my hand to tell me to stop filming and start feeding.
The Coal Tits were, as usual, flitting around restlessly and I was lucky to get one indifferent picture.
The usual Chaffinch was waiting on the lawn.
A Blue Tit looked out from the forysthia near Mount Gate. The tits here have yellow-stained faces and must have been poking in flowers with yellow pollen -- not the forsythia which is still in bud.
A Robin near Peter Pan was scolding a Magpie, but came over for a pine nut.
The Robin by the Buck Hill shelter was also ticking irritably at something but came to be fed.
The Pied Wagtail on the Serpentine didn't let the drizzle stop her from hunting.
Jays ...
... and Jackdaws followed me round the Long Water ...
... and there was a family group of Magpies by the Serpentine Gallery.
Nothing could be seen as I approached the Grey Herons' nest at the west end of the island, as a sitting bird is invisible from the west side. Then the other heron arrived to change places, and they were both visible standing up.
This is the heron that is always hanging around at the northwest corner of the bridge. People have been feeding it there, and if they aren't around there is a good fishing place under a willow, and the chance of a rat in the bushes -- see this video.
The Czech Black-Headed Gull stared regally from his post.
There is a pair of Great Crested Grebes at the island as well as the single one that has been there for some time. The pair staged a territorial display to drive the single one away.
The Mute Swans' nest site in the reed bed east of the Lido, which has been successfully used in the previous two years, was showing signs of trampling by swans.
I think it was done by this pair, 4FYY and 4FUF, who were nearby. They have also inspected the floating raft just round the corner of the reed bed but evidently didn't trust it.
Only one of the pair of Egyptian Geese at Henry Moore was feeding on Buck Hill. It looks as if the female is nesting again. They are almost always unsuccessful, and have only ever managed to raise young once.
The lone immature Shoveller drake on the Serpentine has been joined by an adult drake. All the other Shovellers are on the Long Water.
















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