Just as everyone had given up hope, the Mute Swan 4GIQ has hatched a hybrid cygnet. She was turning the remaining eggs and clearly considered that there may be more on the way.
The father was celebrating in his own way by throwing sticks about.
Shortly after I took these pictures, thunder and a drenching downpour brought the hot spell to an end.
There are a lot of geese as Greylags and Canadas come in to moult their flight feathers in the relative safety of the lake. The rain had cleared the park of people and dogs, and a flock of Canadas took the opportunity to have a good feed on the grass.
The one and only Canada family were at Peter Pan.
The Mandarin family, not seen yesterday, were at the Vista defying a harmless Moorhen that happened to be passing. The ducklings are just as fierce as their mother, and I have seen one of them routing a Coot.
The other main item of news is that there is definitely a pair of Little Owls at the Serpentine Gallery. We've been mainly seeing a male here, and he is shown in yesterday's blog. Over past days I have seen an owl that I thought was female, but I wasn't sure, as males can fluff themselves up and contract their eyebrows and unless you get a really good look you can't be sure. But today I saw two owls fly from one of the old chestnut trees to another and got a picture of an owl that is certainly female looking down gravely from a branch. She went into a hole in the hollow tree, and it seems quite likely that they pair are nesting here, in the tree farther from the gallery, not in the tree with a leaning trunk where the male was raised last year.
A Great Tit brought half a pine nut to a fledgling at the southwest corner of the bridge. He had eaten half of it himself. The young one got plenty, though, as the father came back several times for pine nuts.
A Wren at the northwest corner of the bridge had caught a caddis fly.
A Robin looked out from a branch as one of the innumerable midges flew past.
David Element sent a fine picture of one of the Grey Wagtails, which had caught a damselfly and was about to eat it on a post at the bridge.
The familiar male Pied Wagtail perched on a barrier at the Dell restaurant.
A young Blackbird foraged under the bushes at Mount Gate. There were two here.
We've been having a lot of videos of the Song Thrush singing in the leaf yard, but if it sings like that in full view a few feet away how can anyone resist filming it?
Feral Pigeons relaxed and preened in wood chips in the Flower Walk.
A rain-soaked Carrion Crow perched on the ornamental crown on top of a gas lamp post.
A Great Spotted Woodpecker called from the top of a weeping willow at Fisherman's Keep, not a place where you'd expect to see one. It soon flew away.
The solitary tatty Black-Headed Gull was looking bedraggled after the rain. Gulls don't usually get so wet, and it looks as if its preen gland isn't providing enough oil to keep its feathers in good condition.









%202026%201a.jpg)












%20eyeing%20pigeons%202026%201a.jpg)



%202026%201a.jpg)















%202026%201a.jpg)







%202026%201a.jpg)
%202026%201a.jpg)






