On a beautiful sunny day a Song Thrush near the Italian Garden didn't feel the need to shout.
A Blackbird sang from the top of an oak by the Henry Moore sculpture.
At the beginning of the clip you can hear this Robin singing briefly at the bottom of the tree.
On the other side of the path a Wren on a bramble shifted nervously as people walked by on Buck Hill.
A Starling at the Lido restaurant had won a bit of someone's fish and chips.
Seen at Fisherman's Keep, this is the male Pied Wagtail who had a painful avian pox blister on his right foot. It's almost completely gone down now, and he was running about happily.
It's hard to see into the Grey Heron nests on the island, but it looks as if the chick partly visible here is younger than the three from the second nest and is one of a third brood. This nest is in the same tree as the second nest but higher up.
Two male Great Crested Grebes were having a territorial dispute in the water below. As usual it didn't come to a fight and the result was inconclusive. The one on the right went off to his mate and they had a little natter together.
Again it's hard to see, but in this view across the Long Water by the bridge it looks as if the grebe on the left is at a partly completed nest. The other examined a terrapin basking on a branch.
A Coot fed a chick in the nest under the Italian Garden.
The nest under the balcony of the Dell restuarant is now complete and in use -- at least until the next westerly gale. Menus from the restaurant which blow into the water are usually added to nests here.
The Mute Swans nesting on the gravel strip in the Long Water always have a retinue of Tufted Ducks, but it seems surprising that they are still tolerating the pair of Canada Geese that have been resting next to them for several days.
The Egyptian Geese at the Triangle looked after four of their five goslings ...
... while the fifth headed insouciantly into the middle of the lake catching midges.
A female Hairy-Footed Flower Bee visited a cowslip by the bridge.
A delicate little Andrena mining bee browsed on a Star of Bethlehem in the Rose Garden. Its legs have a slight yellow tinge, bit I think not enough for it to be A. flavipes.
A Batman Hoverfly, Syrphus ribesii, rested on a leaf. When you look at the mark on its thorax this way up you can see why, in the days before D.C. Comics, it was called the Death's-Head Hoverfly.
A bunch of balloons celebrating the birth of a girl had got loose and driftred away over south Kensington. Absit omen.






















































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