A male Greenfinch twittered in a tree near Peter Pan ...
... and a family of Long-Tailed Tits passed through a holly next to it ...
... while across the path a Song Thrush collected worms for a its young.
Young Great Tits could be heard begging all around the Long Water.
The male Little Owl at the Serpentine Gallery was at the top of the chestnut tree, but I couldn't find an owlet.
The Starling colony at the back of the Lido had decamped en masse to the restaurant, where they lined the roof ...
... and perched on the tower waiting for the chance of a raid on a table.
The Grey Heron chicks in the nest at the east end of the Serpentine were begging frantically whenever a parent visited.
A Coot brought an iris leaf to a nest in the Italian Garden fountains as the chicks milled about.
The idiotically sited nest on the electric boat is still in place.
The Mute Swan 4GIQ is usually near the bridge with her single hybrid cygnet while the Black Swan father is still moping on the raft.
An Egyptian Goose led her seven goslings across the Serpentine Road as a dog approached.
A pair brought their four to the shore near the Lido.
The Mandarin with two ducklings was in the middle of the Serpentine near the bridge ...
... and the Pochard with one came over at the Vista.
The fox near the Vista, which we've seen several times before, was out enjoying the warm sunshine.
A Shasta daisy in the Rose Garden had attracted a bee of the Colletes genus. There are a lot of species, and they are known as Plasterer or Cellophane Bees because they make a kind of plastic to line their nests.
A ground beetle crossed the path. It looks like a Harpalus species, maybe H. rufipes as the legs are reddish. The genus is called after Alexander the Great's treacherous friend Harpalus who was appointed his chancellor and beetled off to Babylon with a large amount of his money.


























































