A Wren sang and preened on a twig by the Henry Moore sculpture.
A Robin perched in cherry blossom by Peter Pan.
I almost missed the pair of Robins at Mount Gate, but they saw me leaving and flew out to catch me in a tree by the Albert Memorial. This is the female with her distinctive untidy feathers.
They were accompanied by a Blue Tit.
The Long-Tailed Tits nesting in the hedge of the Ranger's Cottage garden were bouncing about in the trees.
I couldn't see the Little Owl here, or the one at the Serpentine Gallery, a disappointment on a warm sunny day. The Ranger's Lodge tree had a pair of Stock Doves in it, a nuisance for the owls as they are rivals for holes and very persistent in occupying them.
Chiffchaffs were singing all round the lake but I couldn't get a picture. However, Ahmet Amerikali got a close-up of one at Russia Dock Woodland.
A Carrion Crow had been bathing on the fallen poplar at Peter Pan, and perched on the trunk to dry in the sunshine.
A Grey Heron was squatting in the Caroline enclosure. You don't often see one in this odd posture. It's actually sitting on its tarsi, the joints that correspond to human heels but in a bird's leg are much higher up.
The solitary Moorhen in the Dell has a favourite rock in the stream where it likes to rest, though it's often pushed off it by Mallards.
A Coot brought a titbit to the chicks in the nest under the Italian Garden.
There seems to be a second Canada Goose nest on the Long Water opposite Peter Pan. This shouldn't cause conflict with the one on the swan nesting island as it's a reasonable distance away and Canadas are tolerant of each other's families -- indeed they often cooperate in looking after goslings. But it's not a safe place with foxes ranging along the shore.
The Egyptian Geese with five goslings at the Lido have taken to resting on the jetty when there are crowds of visitors passing by on the shore. They have occasional trouble with Coots but can easily shoo them.
The female mute Swan 4FUF was sitting comortably on her best in the reeds east of the Lido.
Her mate 4FYY was patrolling the water with his wings raised menacingly.
The single Mandarin drake was on the Serpentine. He chased a Coot that had come too close.
A female Hairy-Footed Flower Bee fed on cercis blossom in the Rose Garden.
The odd angle makes it hard to identify this hoverfly, but the colours on top of its abdomen suggest that it's just a Common Drone Fly, Eristalis tenax. Later: a suggestion that it's likely to be Epistrophe elegans (or eligans, which I would think is a misspelling but often occurs).





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