A Blue Tit called from a flowering cercis bush in the Rose Garden.
Another at Mount Gate was lurking in the pink-flowered currant bush ...
... along with the single Robin, the only one of the three that will come to my hand.
Across the path a pair of Long-Tailed Tits jumped around in a Japanese maple.
A Chiffchaff sang in an alder near the Italian Garden. A pair are nesting in the brambles below.
Ahmet Amerikali got a fine picture of the Cetti's Warbler at the Vista ...
... and a male Blackbird carrying larvae. It's good to see that they are already nesting.
A female Magpie on the lawn outside begged her mate to bring her food. He was reluctant to respond, but he won't get anywhere till he does, as she is testing him to ensure that he will feed her when she is on the nest.
The two young Grey Herons in the top nest playfully grabbed each other's bills. Done to a parent, that gesture would be a demand to be fed, but here they were just being silly with each other.
The three younger Grey Herons on the island are growing up. They can probably fly by now, though I haven't seen one any farther out of the nest than it could climb. They will still be fed by their parents for several weeks.
The solitary first-year Black-Headed Gull was still at Fisherman's Keep. It's a bit tatty but seems healthy and its wings are in good order, so it's odd that it didn't fly away when the others left for their breeding grounds.
Just offshore, a pair of Great Crested Grebes dozed as they were bounced by the choppy waves raised by a stiff breeze.
The Mute Swans nesting in the reeds near the outflow are 4DVZ and 4FYF. I could only read one of the rings yesterday.
The standoff on the Long Water is still holding. The boss was on his nest site in the reeds under the Italian Garden ...
... and his mate was resting in the water near the nesting island ...
... but neither of them was bothering the Canada Goose sitting on her eggs.
I simply don't understand why the boss hasn't claimed the nesting island he used successfully last year with his late mate.
Two swans on the Serpentine gained altitude to fly over the bridge on their way to the Round Pond.
The six eldest Egyptian goslings on the Serpentine have been spoilt by visitors feeding them. If you stand still they come towards you expectantly. I don't feed them. It's much better that they should get their natural diet of grass and larvae, and bad diet may be a factor in them getting the 'angel wing' deformity caused by weak bones, though this is certainly also hereditary.




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