A male Whitethroat perched in a winged elm tree beside the Long Water. It was exactly where I had seen one a few days ago and almost certainly the same bird.
The Song Thrush often heard at the southeast corner of the leaf yard was in an elder tree beside the path.
This male Blackbird at Magazine Gate is also a familiar sight in his favourite holly tree.
A Wren stared from the red-leafed cherry tree a short way down the slope ...
... and there was another beside the path at the back of the Lido.
The male Robin at Mount Gate came out for pine nuts.
A young Great Tit in the Rose Garden looked neat and fresh, in contrast to the parents who have become tatty from the strain of looking after them.
Swifts whizzed and screamed over a weeping willow tree beside the Serpentine.
A male Pied Wagtail by the Dell restaurant found a small black larva.
Two Jays regularly appear for peanuts: one in a poplar south of the Vista ...
... and another near the Albert Memorial.
A Carrion Crow looked expectant on a stump beside the Serpentine Road.
The male Little Owl was in his usual lime tree. It seems odd that although there are a male and a female owl here they never seem to call to each other.
A Grey Heron blended into the fallen poplar at Peter Pan.
The Black Swan took time off from his futile vigil on the eggs to have a frantic wash on the Serpentine.
His single cygnet was eating algae at the edge, watched over by his Mute mother 4GIQ.
It's the high season for Buff-Tailed Bumblebees, which outnumber even the Honeybees in the Rose Garden. A patch of Penstemon was full of them ...
.. and they also enjoy the peculiar flowers of the Bottlebrush Plant, Callistemon citrinus, an Australian species.






























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