DISCARDED AND DISTORTED
TWO BIRDS
ITALIAN GARDEN
SPRING UNFOLDING
BOOK LOVER'S WINDOW
Heron by the boat house
Evening light
Young family
Family promenade
Spectacular spring
Taking 'exercise' in the park
Shapely curves
Against the evening light
Churchil ARMs pub
Lost feather
Heron and fresco
The clear air in London
Afloat
Paddling along
Bridge over calm water
beach
Mill and clouds
After the rain
A bubble curve
Charing Cross across the river
Creating bubbles
A streak of delight
London Eye observed
Sand and soap
Soap opera at the National Theatre
St Pauls and a bubble
Concrete and soap
Somerset House
Lamps and bubbles
Espresso bar
National History Museum
Rain drops and petals
After the rain
Dramatic petals
Albert Memorial and flower
Droplets on serrated leaves
Blooming pink
Forsythia
Red berries
Beginning life
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WATCHING
It gives me great pleasure and a sense of wellbeing watching the ducks, moorhens, geese, swans, seagulls, and other fowl, swimming in or sitting close to the water bodies on London's parks.
Sometimes, I have spotted rarer birds such as herons, cormorants, and pelicans (in St James Park). Golders Hill Park in northwest London used to have flamingos. I do not know if they are still there, but hope they are.
I often wonder what the birds think about the humans, who come to visit them, that is if they, the fowl, think at all. Are we good company for them or simply an occasional source of welcome food waste?
It does not matter to me whether or not they think, so long as they are there to give us all a pleasurable experience and that they are enjoying life in an avian kind of way.
Sometimes, I have spotted rarer birds such as herons, cormorants, and pelicans (in St James Park). Golders Hill Park in northwest London used to have flamingos. I do not know if they are still there, but hope they are.
I often wonder what the birds think about the humans, who come to visit them, that is if they, the fowl, think at all. Are we good company for them or simply an occasional source of welcome food waste?
It does not matter to me whether or not they think, so long as they are there to give us all a pleasurable experience and that they are enjoying life in an avian kind of way.
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