There were encouraging signs of the approach of spring everywhere. A Blue Tit ...
... and a Great Tit perched in cherry blossom in the Rose Garden ...
... while the male Chaffinch waited on the trunk.
A Coal Tit perched in a rose bush with the leaves just beginning to come out.
A pair of Long-Tailed Tits in a tree at the Vista should soon be nesting in the brambles below. A pair on the other side of the lake have already been seen collecting nesting material. It takes some time to build their complex spherical nests.
The third Robin at Mount Gate was in a forsythia bush whose buds are about to burst into yellow blossom.
The Robin from the southwest corner of the bridge followed me to the Vista. It hasn't learnt yet that it can collect all the pine nuts it wants in one visit, so it flies out again and again.
The Jackdaws were on the ruined Parade Ground looking for worms in the mud. One perched in a tree at the edge.
A Great Spotted Woodpecker climbed on the dead top of an old chestnut tree by the leaf yard. You can see that it's female because it doesn't have a red patch on the back of its head.
The female Pied Wagtail on the Serpentine found a small larva, its second in the minute when I was photographing it. It's catching enough to keep it going, but has to work hard when there are few flying insects.
The dominant Black-Headed Gull Blue 2331, on its usual post, had a dull green background of a weeping willow just beginning to put out leaves. They are the first of the trees to go into leaf in spring.
A pair of Black-Headed Gulls were displaying on the edge of the Serpentine. They haven't yet got the dark heads of their breeding plumage and it will be a while before they are off to their breeding ground, which may be as far away as Russia or as near as the Pitsea rubbish dump in Basildon.
This isn't a good video, but I'm putting it up because it shows the first indistinct glimpse of a Grey Heron chick in the top nest on the island. It's bouncing around below and to the left of its parent, and you can just hear the sound of it clacking its beak through the wind noise.
A pair added twigs to a nest in the middle of the island. There are already several big old nests here they could reuse with only small additions, but it seems that they want a place of their own.
Below it a Cormorant perched in an ash.
One of the Great Crested Grebes from the bridge was fishing at the Triangle.
Seeing its mate in the middle of the lake, it hurried over and they had a ceremonial greeting. There's a good nest site under an oak on the Long Water side of the bridge, but let's hope they don't use it till the summer when there are enough small fish to feed the chicks.
A pair of Egyptian Geese preened on a fallen tree at Peter Pan.















































's%20mate%20alone%20on%20roof%202026%201a.jpg)









