Friday, 16 June 2023

Mallard family in the Italian Garden

The Little Owl at the Round Pond was keeping an eye on the nest tree while staying cool in the shade of a small lime.


The Hobby was hunting here again. There were a few Swifts over the pond, birds that I think only an agile Hobby can catch. Sean Gillespie photographed it in the top of a plane tree.


Both the Peregrines were on the barracks tower, closer together than usual with these standoffish birds.


We haven't been seeing much of the pigeon-eating Lesser Black-Backed Gull recently, as the Feral Pigeons in his usual place have learnt to avoid him. But today he was standing in a lordly attitude on his favourite spot on the Dell restaurant roof.


Another picture from Sean: a Great Tit looking severely worn from feeding chicks.


A young Long-Tailed Tit paused in a treetop in the Flower Walk.


A Grey Heron had commandeered the Coots' nest at the bridge as a fishing station.


It caught a perch.


A pair of Pochards dived nearby to browse on algae.


A Mallard has brought out eleven ducklings in a fountain pool in the Italian Garden. It's remarkable how the little creatures have manged to jump up the foot-high kerb to get into the pool.


A Banded Demoiselle Fly perched on an iris leaf in the next pool.


There were dragonflies everywhere. A male Emperor perched on a willow twig at the bridge, next to the fishing heron.


A male Black-Tailed Skimmer hung from a campanula flower near Peter Pan ...


... and a female landed on a stem in the Rose Garden.


Three pictures of bees by Duncan Campbell, all taken near the tennis courts. A male Wool Carder ...


... probably a species of Leafcutter Bee ...


... and almost certainly a White-Jawed Yellow-Faced Bee, tiny in the middle of a white rose.


Back to birds, and two videos from Spain. House Martins on a wire in Cáceres, a video from Extremadura shot by Emilio Pacios.


It's raining in Spain, but not here. A White Stork took her two young under her wings to keep them dry. Thanks to Tinúviel for forwarding this video shot at Alcalá de Henares near Madrid.

5 comments:

  1. Thanks for the walk!
    Theodore

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was a pleasure. Always good to have a pair of young eyes spotting things I would have overlooked, like that Demoiselle.

      Delete
  2. Intellectually I know how taxing rearing chicks is for bird parents, but dear God. I never cease to be amazed by how much effort small birds spend till the chicks fledge.
    I'm sure I have asked before, but just how old is Pigeon Killer?
    Tinúviel

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. He was already hunting succesfully in 2008, and must have spent aome time learning, so I reckon he's at least 17, more likely 20. So he's still in his prime.

      Delete
  3. No fish is escaping a ferocious stab from a Herons beak, it’s such a weapon!
    Sean

    ReplyDelete