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.





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