Tuesday 21 May 2024

Singing in the rain

A Song Thrush beside the Long Water ignored today's rain and sang cheerfully in a holly tree.


They are usually shy birds, but this one at the tennis courts in Hyde Park was busy with a worm and stood its ground while Duncan Campbell filmed it yesterday.



A young Starling at Mount Gate was looking bedraggled ...


... while an adult splashed happily in a puddle.


Movement in the reeds under the Italian Garden set me looking for a Reed Warbler, but it turned out to be a couple of Blue Tits looking for insects.


A damp Carrion Crow perched on the balustrade hoping for a peanut, which of course it got.


The young Grey Herons on the island were back in their tree, with one in the nest while the other climbed in the branches.


It's not clear what has happened with the Mute Swans that were nesting at the Serpentine outflow and had at least one cygnet. Yesterday Mike Harris sent an ominous picture of one of the teenage foxes from the Dell eyeing them.


Today the nest was deserted and there was no sign of eggs, whole or broken. I talked to Andrea, the Dell gardener, who takes a keen interest in the wildlife on her patch. She had found no sign of trouble either in the Dell or at the nest site, but hadn't seen the swans either. The most likely explanation is that any cygnets died for one reason or another, and the swans have gone back to join the others on the lake.

A typical picture of the on-off relationship of the Black Swan with his Mute girlfriend; he was gazing wistfully at her as she took no notice of him.


The swans with seven cygnets on the Long Water must have thought it wasn't raining hard enough, so they went under the waterspouts on the edge of the Italian Garden.


An Egyptian Goose in the Italian Garden had the same idea and took a shower in the marble fountain.


There are seven Egyptian goslings on the Round Pond. There were no other Egyptians when I was there, which is good as their parents won't get into one of their silly territorial fights and leave them exposed to raiding gulls.


The four ill-matched goslings on the Serpentine are growing up and the difference in size between the older and younger two is beginning to lessen.


There are also two new ones, which had been browsing on the horse ride. Their parents had seen a dog approaching and were hurrying them across the road to the edge of the lake.


After the dog had gone, the Canadas with three goslings returned to the ride. This is the most successful Canada family in what has been a very bad year for them.


The Mallard drake in the Dell had flown to the Rose Garden and was swimming in the fountain. His mate trotted over the lawn to join him.


You wouldn't have expected to see a bee out in the rain, but this Buff-Tailed Bumblebee was keeping dry on a Stachys byzantina by sheltering under one of its big woolly leaves while it browsed on the flowers on the stem.


An interesting picture from Duncan Campbell, also from near the tennis courts. Web-spinning caterillars have completely enclosed a small tree and were eating all the leaves inside the web. Often their attack kills the tree. To identify them you need to know the species of the tree, which is probably undiscoverable now. But when this happened to a large bush beside the Serpentine a few years ago the culprit was an Ermine Micromoth, a group of insects that includes many species.

7 comments:

  1. Hi Ralph a damp day indeed, by the looks of it !!..love that pic of the carrion crow, it's expression is priceless !...great to see so many goslings....no mention of last night's "patrol"...I certainly agree with your comment of song thrushes being shy birds...the highlight of my birding day was a redstart..(male)..regards,Stephen...

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    1. Still raining hard and no sign of it stopping. The heating has switched itself on. Let's have a bit of that global warming they're moaning about.

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  2. Hi Ralph, I came down tonight and it was about 7pm and I saw a bumble bee pollinating by the Royal Mail Postbox near the Police Station. It was raining heavily very strange but it seemed happy.

    We stayed in the park until midnight, and it was very peaceful and serene, hard to believe and imagine such tragedy happened the night before. The swans already go thru enough stress. The parks are refusing to put up signs for the average owners to keep dogs on leads but oddly the Round Pond has got the signs.

    Those dogs/owner that savaged the young swan two days ago wouldn't care
    about any signs anyway. Tonight is raining heavily but we are hoping to patrol again later this week. The person may be coming late in a car - doubt they are local, they could be driving to other areas on different days setting their dogs upon birds and foxes. Let's hope it won't go unpunished. But when you see the frustration here- the Royal Parks just don't care. One swan less or two.. they don't make them money like Stephen said. I remember those times 15 years ago when lovely caring people were in charge. Now it's all about money making events.

    Jenna

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    1. It is actually stated in the park regulations that dogs must be on leads next to water. The removal of the notices pointing this out is explainable only by the park management being a bunch of venal creeps.

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  3. The Round Pond has got these notices and it even has a stamp mark
    Of Met police. So why not the Serpentine? We simply asked for signs to be there and they refused. But if you were to pay entry fee to get to the lake oh you would see the birds receiving 24/7 care, vet on premises etc. a bit like The London Zoo. But on 1st June they will have football hooligans in the park whole day as an event and that will be some more cash £££ into the already lush pot.

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  4. Swans look so invulnerable, it's heartbreaking to know that not even all their strength, power and watchfulness is enough sometimes.
    Very glad to hear the Song Thrush.I could listen to it for hours, all the more so because our birds are beginning to fall silent and bird song is, to me, as essential to life as sunlight is.
    Tinúviel

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    1. Nothing is proof against pike, which sneak up from below with steel trap jaws.

      Our songbirds have passed their peak. They go quieter over the course of June and are silent by the beginning of July. Even the Robins don't start singing again till the autumn.

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