A Blackbird sang and was answered by another in a plane tree by the South Carriage Drive.
A female rummaged in fallen leaves in the scrubby patch east of the Lido.
A Song Thrush sang against another near the Italian Garden, but I couldn't record them because the leaf yard is being remade and is full of noisy earthmoving machinery.
The unattached Robin at Mount Gate posed against pink cherry blossom. It's beginning to look tatty. Maybe it does have a mate somewhere, but I've seen no evidence of that.
The pair of Robins with the young one were scurrying about under a large acanthus and I still haven't been able to get a picture.
A Blue Tit was furiously impatient at being photographed instead of fed, bouncing around and shouting. This added to the delay, but I finally got one hasty shot and fed it.
A Great Tit was waiting in a hawthorn near Temple Gate, but it stayed still and so got fed much more quickly.
A Carrion Crow perched on one of the new bombastic notices about 'Wonderful Woodlands'. The park management seems to be getting these written by an advertising agency, or possibly by Grok instructed to write puffery.
A pair of Lesser Black-Backed Gulls were moaning affectionately at each other at the Triangle. Their calls are lower pitched than those of Herring Gulls, and you can tell which is which without seeing them.
The Great Crested Grebes that were beginning to nest under the collapsed willow by the bridge were frightened away when a large branch fell off the tree. However, it was at the other side of the tree and their nest site is intact, and now they are coming back to it.
A pair of grebes harassed the Coot nesting under the Dell restaurant balcony, making it clear that they wanted to take over the nest. A grebe can always beat a Coot in the water, but usually it is the persistence of the Coot that allows it to win these disputes in the end.
The four Coot chicks from the nest under the Italian Garden are growing well. Two were out on the water with a parent ...
... and two preening in the nest.
The Black Swan gestured and hooted to his Mute mate 4GIQ through the gap they have turn in the fence of the nesting raft. Let's hope the thing doesn't collapse competely before they have finished with it.
Good news from Jenna: the widow of the boss swan, 4DTT, has paired up with the widower 4HDW of a pair that were beginning to nest of the gravel strip when the female was killed by a fox. They are now the only two swans on the Long Water, and are starting to nest. Unfortunately the site is not on the safe nesting island but in the reeds under the Italian Garden, exposed to the foxes. This place is very difficult to see clearly, but I'll do what I can about getting a picture.
The Canada Geese with three goslings are usually seen near the bridge. They must have to go right up to the Vista to find grass, and would have to wait for dusk before this dog-infested area was clear.
Buff-Tailed Bumblebees are now quite numerous and beginning to take over from the Hairy-Footed Flower Bees. A very small one was browsing on the green alkanet at Temple Gate ...
... and another was covered in pollen as it explored a wallflower in the Rose Garden.
Allium is a popular bee plant, and several Honeybees were feeding on it. Apparently this doesn't make the honey taste of onions.
I think this insect on the stonework in the Italian Garden is a Long-Legged Fly, Liancalus virens. It's bigger and leggier than the numerous similar-looking midges.






















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