Bill Haines found a first-winter Mediterranean Gull on the Serpentine. I went looking for it with binoculars and eventually found it too far away for a photograph, but fortunately Bill saw it closer and provided a good picture.
They're hard to spot among the hundreds of Black-Headed Gulls that come to the lake for the winter. One of these was playing with a plane leaf ...
... and the dominant one from the landing stage stood on the Big Bird statue.
The grooved planks on the boat hire platform collect bird droppings when these are swept up, and these attract insects, so it's a good hunting ground for a Pied Wagtail.
More Jays are appearing, and two followed me down the east side of the Long Water demanding peanuts.
Ahmet Amerikali found a Song Thrush by the southwest corner of the bridge, where a pair bred earlier this year.
Two Coal Tits aprrived, one in the corkscrew hazel in the Dell ...
... and the other in the little hawthorn in the Rose Garden ....
... where the usual Robin was also waiting.
The male Chaffinch perched in a rose bush.
The Robin at Mount Gate came out when called, in front of an unseasonably blossoming hypericum.
A Grey Heron by one of the boathouses waited for a fish to emerge from under the wall ...
... and another looked out over the Long Water from a dead tree.
A Great Crested Grebe fishing along the edge of the Serpentine was mildly curious. The shore is another world for them, seen but never visited.
A pair of Gadwalls browsed in the shallows.
A band of Mallards from the Vista visited an oak tree to look for insects and worms in the fallen leaves.
A single Little Japanese Umbrella mushroom emerged in the grass by the Serpentine Gallery. These tiny frail things last less than a day, wilting and drooping by evening.
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