Sunshine brought out the Little Owl at the Serpentine Gallery. It was slightly chilly, so he was fluffed up to keep warm.
So was the single Robin at Mount Gate.
A Blue Tit posed in an osmanthus bush in the Dell ...
... and there were more in the cercis in the Rose Garden.
A Coal Tit appeared for a moment in a tree by the gate, and I got just one shot before it flew off.
It was feeding time for the three younger Grey Heron chicks on the island and they were flapping about frantically.
You don't usually see a heron swimming, but this one was lured out from the island by someone throwing prawns to it. Evidently this has happened before, because the heron was most enthusiastic about snatching them.
A Great Crested Grebe rested in the still water.
The grebes nesting in the reeds on the Long Water were adding some twigs and algae to their soggy nest. These ill-made constructions keep sinking and have to be built up regularly to keep them in existence. It hasn't occurred to the grebes that they could make a much better nest from reeds, as Coots do and indeed grebes do in places like the Norfolk Broads where reeds are the only availabel material.
The Coots nesting at the bridge now have at least four eggs. Probably more are on the way.
The Coot on the post at Peter Pan ignored a Cormorant ominously above it.
The Egyptian Geese with the six oldest goslings had crossed the lake and were at the boat hire platform.
The pair with seven at the Lido took them to feed on the grass at the back.
Most of the wallflowers in the Rose Garden are now too withered for bees, and this Hairy-Footed Flower Bee had moved to the pansies.
A Dark-Edged Bee Fly, Bombylius major, preferred a grape hyacinth. This is the first one of these sinister parasitic flies I've seen this year.
Another first for the year: a Common Wasp at the southwest corner of the bridge. It was scraping bits off a bramble stem, evidently intending to build a paper nest.
The first cowslips are coming up here.
Participants in a charity walk in the park were spurred on their way by the Voodoo Brass Band. The large brass instrument is a sousaphone, created for the 19th century American composer John Philip Sousa for use in marching bands. It is curved around the body of the player to keep him from knocking over the marcher next to him.



















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