Monday, 15 June 2026

Young Mistle Thrush

Mistle Thrushes have been very scarce in the park this year, so it was good to find that they have managed to breed. Theodore filmed this young one in a bird cherry tree.


Two Great Tit fledglings in the Dell begged their father to feed them.


A family of Long-Tailed Tits flitted around in the bushes at the southwest corner of the bridge. I only managed to get a picture of an adult.


A Jay at Mount Gate posed in front of a hypericum bush.


The male Little Owl at the Serpentine Gallery peeped out from the lime tree.


A Pied Wagtail was collecting insects on the lawn in the Rose Garden.


A Grey Wagtail hunting from the posts at Peter Pan ...


... flew over to perch above the Coots' nest.


The Coots in the Italian Garden were feeding their chicks.


A Coot has built a nest right in the middle of the Long Water. It must be supported on something, maybe a waterlogged fallen branch. Toward the end of the clip you can hear a Marsh Frog croaking in the reed bed next to the Vista.


Here is a better recording of the Marsh Frog. I was alerted to their presence yesterday by Jamie C, and was surprised as I'd never had a report of one before, although I did once find a dead Common Frog which had been dropped by a Grey Heron near the Ranger's Lodge garden.

Grey Herons perched one above the other in a fallen tree on the Long Water by the bridge.


Ahmet Amerikali got a fine shot of one catching a carp in the Italian Garden.


A Greylag Goose ate weeds growing at the edge by the Dell restaurant.


The two Mandarin ducklings on the lake have now passed the most dangerous stage and have a good chance of survival. Here they are eating algae on the edge of the Serpentine by the landing stage.


The hybrid Black x Mute cygnet was also here, with its mother 4GIQ keeping an eye on it. The Black Swan was still on the raft.


A Small White butterfly drank nectar on a bramble flower by the leaf yard.


A worker Honeybee filled her pollen baskets on a Shasta daisy in the Rose Garden.


Repairs to the bridge are finally nearing completion, and the new balustrade is in place. It's been two and a half years since the car crash that brought it down.

Sunday, 14 June 2026

Feeding chicks

A male Greenfinch twittered in a tree near Peter Pan ...


... and a family of Long-Tailed Tits passed through a holly next to it ... 


... while across the path a Song Thrush collected worms for a its young.


Young Great Tits could be heard begging all around the Long Water.


The male Little Owl at the Serpentine Gallery was at the top of the chestnut tree, but I couldn't find an owlet.


The Starling colony at the back of the Lido had decamped en masse to the restaurant, where they lined the roof ...


... and perched on the tower waiting for the chance of a raid on a table.


The Grey Heron chicks in the nest at the east end of the Serpentine were begging frantically whenever a parent visited.


A Coot brought an iris leaf to a nest in the Italian Garden fountains as the chicks milled about.


The idiotically sited nest on the electric boat is still in place.


The Mute Swan 4GIQ is usually near the bridge with her single hybrid cygnet while the Black Swan father is still moping on the raft.


An Egyptian Goose led her seven goslings across the Serpentine Road as a dog approached.


A pair brought their four to the shore near the Lido.


The Mandarin with two ducklings was in the middle of the Serpentine near the bridge ...


... and the Pochard with one came over at the Vista.


The fox near the Vista, which we've seen several times before, was out enjoying the warm sunshine.


A Shasta daisy in the Rose Garden had attracted a bee of the Colletes genus. There are a lot of species, and they are known as Plasterer or Cellophane Bees because they make a kind of plastic to line their nests.


A ground beetle crossed the path. It looks like a Harpalus species, maybe H. rufipes as the legs are reddish. The genus is called after Alexander the Great's treacherous friend Harpalus who was appointed his chancellor and beetled off to Babylon with a large amount of his money.

Saturday, 13 June 2026

Sunny but dull

A sunny Saturday bringing hordes of visitors to the park is never a good time for seeing birds. Despite two visits to the Serpentine Gallery I missed seeing any of the Little Owls. Even the ubiquitous Great Tits were staying in the bushes. This is one of the pair that nested in the lamp post at the east end of the Serpentine.


A young Starling found an apple core at the Lido restaurant. It looks more as if the bird was fighting it rather than eating it.


An adult on a table glittered in the sunshine.


The Grey Heron chicks in the fourth nest on the Serpentine island are growing rapidly on their nutritious diet of regurgitated fish.


A Coot brought an iris leaf to the nest in the water lilies in the Italian Garden.


The four chicks from the nest under the parapet are now almost adult size.


The Mute Swans with five cygnets were keeping them safely well down the lake ...


... away from the Black Swan, who was madly throwing algae about ...


... and 4GIQ who was looking after their single cygnet by the bridge.


Six Egyptian goslings and their mother were strolling around on the path by the small boathouses, ignoring the passing humans. But if a dog appears in the distance, even on a lead, they will all hurry to the water.


The Mandarin ducklings are quite large now, and were nearby with their mother catching low flying midges.


The Pochard with her single duckling was at the Vista.


A fox looked out of the long grass a few yards to the south of the waterfront.


A large carp cruised around a pool in the Italian Garden.


A Comma butterfly perched on a nettle near Peter Pan.


The edge of the Long Water was crowded with Common Blue damselflies.


Two Buff-Tailed Bumblebees shared a scabiour flower at the back of the Lido.


A Greenbottle fly sunned itelf by the Dell.

Friday, 12 June 2026

Little owlet

The Little Owl pair at the Serpentine Gallery have produced at least one owlet. It looked down from a branch of the old chestnut tree.


Its father was on the other side of the tree.


A Song Thrush sang n a holly tree near Peter Pan.


Coots nesting in a fountain pool in the Italian Garden were taking care of their four chicks.


The Mute Swans with five cygnets came right up the Serpentine, passing within 50 feet of the Black Swan on the nesting raft, and I was worried that he was going to attack them.


But he stayed in place and they went under the bridge on to the Long Water.


Two hybrid geese, three quarters Bar-Headed and a quarter Greylag, fly in from St James's Park every year to moult their flight feathers. This one, which often spends quite a long time here, knows me and came over to collect some peanuts.


Seven Egyptian goslings huddled together for shelter from the gusty wind over the Serpentine.


An Egyptian with two grazed on the lawn east of the Lido.


The nest halfway along the island, which has been occupied by Great Crested Grebes and Coots, is now in the possession of a Tufted drake.



The single Pochard duckling, supervised by its mother, was diving busily at the outflow of a drain into the Long Water. This is a popular spot, evidently because the drain which comes from the Round Pond carries a lot of small edible creatures.


In the Rose Garden a Buff-Tailed Bumblebee climbed into a rugosa rose and spun around to get as much pollen as possible.


A Wool Carder Bee landed on a stachys leaf. They scrape the fluff off these leaves to line their nest, which is how they got their common name.


A Eurasian Drone Fly, Eristalis arbustorum, browsed on a Shasta daisy.


A Seven-Spot Ladybird crossed the path.


The Mount Etna Broom tree by the fountain is in spectacular yellow flower.


Two tiny Yellow Fieldcap mushrooms came up on the lawn between the Rose Garden and the Dell. They are very frail and last only for a day.