A Little Egret could be seen on a dead tree opposite Peter Pan. They seldom visit the park, although their relatives the Grey Herons thrive here.
A heron was confronting a pair of Great Crested Grebes and a Moorhen both nesting behind one of the wire baskets around the Serpentine island. I wouldn't have seen the nests if it hadn't been for the grebes shouting at the intruder.
Another new grebe nest in a hard place to see, a dead tree opposite Peter Pan. There are now three active nests. It's taken a while for them to get going, but grebes are more likely to be successful here if they start well into the summer when there are enough small fish to feed their young.
The Black Swan was with his Mute mate 4GIQ and their cygnet by the landing stage.
The Egyptian Goose who seemed poorly yesterday was now looking much better and with his mate on the nesting island on the Long Water.
The Egyptian with two teenagers was at the Vista again.
The tatty Black-Headed Gull that stayed behind on the Serpentine has still not joined up with the returning gulls. This picture shows the threadbare state of the primaries of its left wing. It can fly, but perhaps not well enough to go to a breeding ground. Anyway, it seems to be doing well and its feathers will grow back. Gulls moult their flight feathers one at a time so that they are always airworthy.
A Carrion Crow drank and bathed in the marble fountain in the Italian Garden.
A short way to the south a pair of Song Thrushes and a young one, and a Wren, were disturbed by the arrival of a Jay on a branch above.
A Jay raised his crest at his mate in the variegated holly tree between the bridge and the Vista.
A Greenfinch called from the top of the holly north of Peter Pan, a gathering place for many kinds of songbird.
The female Little owlet at the Serpentine Gallery was preening in the plane tree.
Red-Eyed Damselflies mated on algae in the Italian Garden, with the female laying eggs in the slime.
A Comma butterfly rested in a black walnut tree by the Rose Garden.
A Painted Lady perched in a scrubby patch in the Dell.
I think this bee on a knapweed flower behind the Lido is a Yellow-Legged Mining Bee, but the dusting of yellow pollen makes it hard to tell.
A Honeybee in the Rose garden was excited by an open rose with a lot of pollen in it, and rushed around ecstatically.
Another was browsing on a helenium.



















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