Sunday, 26 April 2026

Little Owl still on view

The Little Owl at the Serpentine was in the lime tree again, looking down with mild interest between the leaves.


A Jay near the Italian Garden ...


... was attracting the anger of a pair of Song Thrushes. One was in the back of the tree whirring furiously, and the other was on the next tree glaring at it.


A Magpie perched in cherry blossom near Peter Pan.


A Blue Tit ate a pine nut in the Rose Garden.


Ahmet Amerikali got good pictures of a Robin by the bridge bringing insects to its nest ...


... and a Pied Wagtail doing the same with a fantastic haul of midges.


An anonymous contributor found a Reed Warbler singing in the Diana fountain reed bed, one of three singing males here and there are others on the Long Water and at the east end of the Serpentine.


There was a Grey Heron in the west nest again. It still seems unlikely that they're serious about nesting here.


A Coot had a faceoff with a heron in the reeds east of the Lido. There seemed to be no reason for this, except pehaps that Coots hate everbody.


The Coots nesting under the Italian Garden still have four chicks in spite of the pike that infest the water here. They preened while one of the pair brought a stick to the nest.


The Black Swan guarding his Mute mate's nest on the floating basket had nothing much to do, and idly picked up twigs and algae and dropped them in the water. On land this would be nesting behaviour. Here it's just fidgeting.


The Canada Geese on the Long Water have three left of their original five goslings. They have gone on a little expedition to the bridge.


An Egyptian Goose posed grandly on the head of a nymph in the Italian Garden.


The Egyptians at the Triangle boldly took their four surviving goslings past a bunch of swans.


Four terrapins were lined up on a branch opposite Peter Pan. They don't breed here as it's too cold and a while ago the population dropped to two, but now it's up again as people dump their pets when they grow too large and snappy.


A Holly Blue butterfly perched on a leaf near the bridge. I like their stripy socks matching their antennae.


A Seven-Spot Ladybird climbed over a False Spiraea in the Rose Garden.

Saturday, 25 April 2026

The Little Owl reappears

The Little Owl at the Serpentine Gallery called from a lime tree. He was perching here rather than in the old chestnut tree where his hole is because this tree has leaves to give him cover, and the chestnut doesn't yet.


A Blue Tit looked for insects in the Cootamundra wattle tree on the north edge of the Rose Garden.


The female Blackbird nesting in the Dell was out looking for worms in the wood chips under the trees.


A Reed Warbler sang in the reeds east of the Lido.


A Grey Heron has returned to the nest at the west end of the island. I don't think it's a sign that it will be nesting. This place has never been successful.


The Great Crested Grebes by the island were fussing around their nest perilously built on a chain. The round thing in the nest isn't an egg, it's a crusty old ball dragged out of the lake and included in the nest for some reason. It must have been quite hard for them to move it.


At 15 seconds into the video you can hear the Cetti's Warbler on the island singing. This is the one at the Vista, photographed by Ahmet Amerikali.


A grebe was fishing around the wire baskets at the bridge.


A Coot brought a leaf to its mate on the nesting basket at the Triangle, ignoring the sitting Mute Swan 4GIQ a few feet away.


The Coot nest on the buoys at the Lido is now complete and occupied, but I don't think it will produce any chicks. This site has never succeeded, which of course doesn't stop the Coots from trying again and again.


The swan at the Lido restaurant was dozing on her nest. She's having a peaceful time because the restaurant people have parked a large ice cream van in front of the site, so people aren't noticing it.


The Canada Geese were on the gravel strip at the Vista with two of there goslings visible through a gap in the leaves.


The six largest young Egyptians cruised past Fisherman's Keep with their mother.


The sole survivor of last year's goslings has had terrible luck with his feet. He had a leg injury and recovered, and then got a badly swollen toe. Just as this was healing it flared up again and is now clearly painful. He is going to be taken to the Swan Sanctuary to be looked after and won't be returned. He has no companions here and won't miss anyone.


Two terrapins basked on the fallen horse chestnut in the Long Water, which has now mostly disintegrated and has become incorporated in a reed bed. The one of the left is a Red-Eared Slider; you can see the red stripe on its head.


The first damselfly of the year appeared in the Dell, a female Common Blue.


Holly Blue butterflies have been flying for several days, but this one by the Vista is the first that stayed still long enough for a hasty picture.

Friday, 24 April 2026

Reed Bunting and Clouded Yellow

A pair of Blackbirds nesting in the Dell hopped around under the trees collecting worms and caterpillars for their nestlings.


Ahmet Amerikali found a male Reed Bunting in the reed bed under the Diana fountain, where there are also three singing Reed Warblers.


A Goldcrest sang in the yew tree on the north edge of the leaf yard.


One of the Long-Tailed Tits nesting on the edge of the Ranger's Lodge garden came out on a twig.


A Chiffchaff sang above it in the top of a sycamore.


Very few small birds came to be fed, but there are always some Great Tits. The leaves of the corkscrew hazel in the Dell are almost as twisted as its twigs.


The male Robin of the pair at Mount Gate collected pine nuts. I haven't seen the female for several days, and hope she's nesting.


A Jay looked expectant near the Italian Garden ...


... and a Carrion Crow watched from the red-leafed cherry tree in the Rose Garden.


Pigeon Eater and his mate were away, and another pair of Lesser Black-Backed Gulls were claiming his place on the Dell restaurant roof.


There are three Grey Heron chicks in the third nest on the island, quite hard to see high in the tree above the second nest.


The Black Swan swaggered about chasing the Mute Swans away from his nest ...


... where a Coot glared sullenly at 4GIQ.


A pair of Egyptian Geese stood on the lower bowl of the marble fountain in the Italian Garden as Coots passed with their chicks in the lake below.


The six Egyptian goslings from the first brood are getting their flight feathers.


A pair of Mallards were enjoying the Huntress fountain in the Rose Garden while the resident Egyptians were away on the lawn.


A Clouded Yellow butterfly perched on a pansy in the herbaceous border. This is the first one I've seen in the park.


Much commoner but still pretty, a Small White fed on a dandelion in the Dell.

Thursday, 23 April 2026

Five Canada goslings

The Canada Geese on the Long Water have moved their goslings down the lake to the gravel strip at the Vista. Perhaps the parents are aware of the dangerous pike hanging around the nesting island. There are five goslings. I couldn't get a picture as they were hidden in the leaves both times I passed, but luckily Duncan Campbell found them on the edge and got this excellent shot.


The Black Swan and his Mute mate 4GIQ were at their nest on the floating basket in the Serpentine. She has laid four eggs now but isn't incubating them yet, so more may be on the way. The nesting Coots on the basket, which were there first, still refuse to budge.


The Mute Swans nesting at the east end of the Serpentine fussed around their nest, watched by the Grey Heron which is usually there fishing on the edge of the reeds. She is sitting on seven eggs.


The two young Grey Herons from the first nest on the Serpentine island were exploring the Long Water. They perched in the big fallen poplar at the Vista.


Ahmet Amerikali, at Russia Dock Woodland, found a Grey Heron catching a very small young fish. That's not much of a meal for a heron, but if the young fish on the lake here are as advanced as that it's good news for the nesting Great Crested Grebes as the fish are just the right size for feeding chicks. Usually they don't reach this size so early in the year, but the premature spring seems to have had its effect.


Ahmet also found another encouraging sign, the first Long-Tailed Tit fledglings already out of the nest and begging their parents to feed them.


I don't think any are out here yet, but there are plenty of parents carrying insects to nests. This one was by the Henry Moore sculpture.


A Robin was also collecting insects near the Italian Garden.


Other than these there weren't many small birds visible, as they were getting finding plenty of bugs and didn't need to come out to be fed. But several Great Tits appeared as usual. This is the female of the pair on the south side of the Dell, calling from the big yew tree.


The female Grey Wagtail was also in the Dell, on a rock under the small waterfall. I don't know whether the pair are nesting here or at the Triangle, but I suspect the latter as I've seen them carrying insects near there several times. They are very mobile and can be found anywhere around the lake.


A male Pied Wagtail was hunting from the posts by the bridge. He called incessantly. Perhaps he doesn't have a mate and is trying to attract one.


A Jay looked out expectantly from a cherry tree near the Italian Garden.


The solitary Black-Headed Gull was at Fisherman's Keep again. It is very tatty but the primary feathers of its wings are crossing over its tail in the correct position so it doesn't seem to be injured. I haven't seen it flying, but presumably it can as it arrived here.


A Yellow-Bellied Slider terrapin sunned itself on the willow by the bridge.


A patch of ground cover with various plants on the south side of the Dell is a good place for bees, and I saw a Common Carder Bee ...


... and a Buff-Tailed Bumblebee here, a change from the Hairy-Footed Flower Bees which are still everywhere.


The patch of green alkanet by Temple Gate attracted a Dark-Edged Bee Fly.


A female Brimstone butterfly fed on a bluebell by the Vista. Their upper wings are white, unlike those of the bright yellow male, but the undersides of both sexes are the same pale green imitating a leaf.