Monday, 13 July 2026

Little owlet nearly loses hold

The female Little owlet in the chestnut tree by the Serpentine Gallery missed her footing in the wind, but saved herself from falling by grabbing the branch with her beak. The rotten wood broke but it was enough to get her up again.


Her father, some way off in his usual lime tree, didn't see the undignified spectacle.


A Green Woodpecker was followed up a tree tunk beside Rotten Row by a fledgling, recognisable by its speckled feathers.


They flew on to different branches.



The male Peregrine was on the barracks tower by himself, ruffled by the wind.


A Grey Heron in the Italian Garden saw a fish ...


... dived in ...


... and got it.


All three young herons were down from the nest at the east end of the island. They found the moored boats a fine adventure playground.



Two young Cormorants, still with pale fronts, wrestled with a twig. It may have been practice for courtship behaviour, or just simple play.


The three Coot chicks in the southeast pool in the Italian Garden were in a comfortable huddle with a parent. This is a second nest, not where they were hatched. Coots often make extra nests to rest in.


A Great Crested Grebe splashed down on the Long Water. It's more like a crash than a tidy touchdown.


The Mute Swan 4DVT and her three cygnets ate algae under the Dell restaurant balcony, with the grebes' nest in the background.


4DTT was under the Italian Garden with her two cygnets.


Unattached swans rested at the Triangle. They tend to collect here when they are moulting, often blocking the narrow path.


A Comma butterfly drank nectar from sea lavender flowers in the Rose Garden.

Sunday, 12 July 2026

In the shade

The male Little Owl at the Serpentine Gallery was staying in the shade in his usual lime tree ...


... and his son was lurking in the chestnut.


A Blackbird in the Rose Garden caught a couple of moths in a flower bed.


Two Stock Doves drinking on a fallen tree in the Long Water were joined by a third.


One of the young Grey Herons from the nest at the east end of the island came right down and explored a boat.


The tatty Black-Headed Gull at Fisherman's Keep remains alone although others are now spreading on to the Serpentine from the Long Water. From where it was it could see several, but didn't want to join them.


The Great Crested Grebes at the island are still on their unreliable nest.


The Coot at the bridge is also in an uncertain place. So far the eggs remain intact.


A pair on the other side of the bridge were feeding chicks under the willow. The view is restricted but I could see three.


I've never been able to see more than two Moorhen chicks on the fallen tree at Peter Pan despite a reliable report of three ...


... but Moorhens are very good at hiding their families. This teenager near the island popped up unexpectedly, possibly from a nest hidden under the boat hire platform.


The solitary Moorhen in the Dell lost its mate to a fox several years ago. Since then it has stayed alone apart from one short-lived flirtation.


The Black Swan, who has been by himself for several days, was back with his Mute mate 4GIQ near the bridge.


4DTT and her two cygnets crossed the Vista.


A female Emperor dragonfly was buzzed by a male Common Blue damselfly as she laid eggs on a patch of algae in the Italian Garden. Damselflies are territorial and don't like intruders, especially ones that might eat them.


A male perched on a red yucca in an urn on the parapet.


A Common Carder bee fed on an agapanthus in the Dell.


A globe thistle in the Rose Garden attracted a Buff-Tailed Bumblebee.

Saturday, 11 July 2026

The joy of chocolate cake

A hot Saturday with a loud pop concert in the park is not a good time for seeing birds, but at least the male Little Owl came out in the lime tree in the afternoon.


A Carrion Crow had won a bit of chocolate cake from the café by the Italian Garden. It was with its family, but didn't offer to share it.


A young Lesser Black-Backed Gull near the Dell restaurant, smaller and darker than a Herring Gull. They have started breeding in the town now so we shall be seeing more of them soon, though they will have a lot of catching up to do with the alarmingly successful Herring Gull colony in Paddington.


The Grey Heron at the Italian Garden, fishing under the marble fountain, shook out its feathers. This is just a momentary comfort movement. The heron hasn't discovered the fishing method of the African Black Heron, which brings its open wings forward over its head to create a sunshade, luring fish into what they think are safe shadows.


The male Great Crested Grebe at the island was sitting comfortably on the newly rebuilt nest. Perhaps his mate has already started laying eggs. Grebes start sitting as soon as the first egg is laid, so the chick hatch over several days. This doesn't matter, as they can be fed on the nest by the grebe that is taking its turn on the water.


The pair that tried to nest on a dead tree on the Long Water were evicted by Coots and haven't found another site yet.


The Coot nesting on the raft at the Triangle was in that odd position again, standing over the eggs with wings lowered. Maybe it thinks they're getting overheated and need shading.


A Moorhen cooled off under the spray from the marble fountain.


The new boss Mute Swan 4HDW's mate 4DTT brought her two cygnets to the Vista to do a bit of begging.


The other mother 4DVT was by the Diana fountain landing stage, taking her three cygnets quite close to the Black Swan. He didn't react. He has lost his mojo since the cygnet died ...


... but not his appetite.  When he saw me he hurried over for some sunflower hearts.


A teenage Egyptian Goose kept cool with a splashy wash in the Serpentine. A final flap showed well developed flight feathers.


The six teenagers by the boathouse were resting on the shore with their parents.


A female Emperor dragonfly laid eggs on the algae under the Italian Garden.


A male was sparring with a Brown Hawker. This isn't a good picture, but I was pleased to get anything as Brown Hawkers are almost impossible to photograph, dashing around non-stop.


It's not just dragonflies that find the railing spikes a perfect place to perch. A Greenbottle fly was sunning itself on one near Peter Pan.


The sea lavender in the Rose Garden attracted a Small White butterfly ...


... and a tattered old Painted Lady.

Friday, 10 July 2026

The widowed swan gets her cygnets after all

This Mute Swan is 4DTT, the widow of the notorious boss swan 4DTH who died earlier this year. She has found a new mate, 4HDW, who is now the new boss of the Long Water, and has just hatched two cygnets. She was taking them past the Peter Pan waterfront, hoping to find someone feeding the birds.


The other mother, 4DVT, was at the Serpentine island with her three.


So was the Tufted Duck from the Long Water, now with only two ducklings.


A Mandarin at the Round Pond has just produced eleven ducklings. This is the third brood of Mandarins on the pond this year, and there are also two young Mandarins, now teenagers, on the lake. Of course casualties are heavy, but it really seems that Mandarin are now an established breeding species in the park.


The mother of the teenagers was at the Vista. The female teenager now has exactly the same plumage as hers, but she has the long wings of a full adult.


The male Great Crested Grebe at the island was resting in front of the completed nest, so there aren't any eggs yet.


The nest at the Dell restaurant has been firmly established and probably with eggs at least since 22 June. The gestation time for a Great Crested Grebe is 27 to 29 days, so we may see chicks in nine or ten days.


I never thought the Coot chicks would realise that the duckboards are a way of getting in and out of the Italian Garden fountains, but the five in the northeast pool have got the idea.


The ponds are teeming with young carp three or four inches long ...


... but the local Cormorant ...


... and Grey Heron are going for bigger fish.


The heron also caught a female Emperor dragonfly which had carelessly strayed too close. Thanks to Ahmet Amerikali for the last three pictures.


The male Little Owl at the Serpentine Gallery could be seen lurking in a lime tree, but the others were lurking more effectively and I couldn't find them.


The Peregrines were both on the barracks tower. The male is on the right of this picture.


A Jay waited for a peanut in the Flower Walk. Most of the small birds were sheltering in the bushes and I only saw a few Great Tits.


A Marmalade Fly, Episyrphus balteatus, browsed on an agapanthus in the Dell.


Female Common Blue Damselflies can be various colours, green, grey and beige, but also blue like the males. But these two pictures of the same pair mating at Peter Pan show that she is only blue on the upper surface of her abdomen. She also has brown eyes.