Readers’ wildlife photos

January 24, 2026 • 8:15 am

Today Friend of the Website Greg Mayer contributes some photos from Britain.

by Greg Mayer

Since we’re awaiting a recharge of the tank of Readers’ Wildlife Photos, I thought I’d add a few wildlife photos from a recent trip to England. I did not bring my good camera with a telephoto lens, since the visit was focused on museums in London, and the photos reflect this constraint.

The only mammal we saw in London was the introduced Gray Squirrel, but in Oxfordshire we saw molehills (made by the European MoleTalpa europea) in and near the churchyard of St. Margaret of Antioch in Binsey. American moles most prominently make much less elevated runs or tracks, not distinct hillocks like these, so the phrase “making a mountain out of a molehill” makes more sense to me now.

Part of Oxford University, Wytham Woods (a famed area for ecological studies) had some Sheep (Ovis aries) in an enclosure. These are domesticated, and the species was brought to Britain thousands of years ago.

In London, we encountered two more corvids. The Carrion Crow (Corvus corone corone) is the most like what is, to an American, a “normal” crow. (During a brief stop in Copenhagen on the way to England, we also saw a Hooded Crow, Corvus corone cornix, which has a gray body, and has a long hybrid zone with the Carrion Crow, )

The other corvid was the Eurasian Magpie (Pica pica), which is much more “crow-y” looking than the jays in America (which are also corvids). We also saw Rooks (Corvus fragileus) on the trip, but got no photos.

Note the blue on the wings of this Magpie.

Like the Carrion Crow above, also on the Victoria Embankment was a Black-headed Gull (Chroicocephalus ribundus); this is an adult in winter plumage. We saw quite a few gulls all around London. Most were larger than this (Larus sp. or spp.), but we could not ID them.

On the way to Greenwich by boat on the Thames, we saw Mute Swans (Cygnus olor), which I include here to show the great tidal range of the Thames, ca. 7 m, evident from the algal growth on the bulkhead behind the pair of swans.

Also on the Thames we saw Great Cormorants (Phalacrocorax carbo), including a pale-bellied juvenile.

We were struck by how the apartments along the south bank of the Thames resembled scenes from movies, for example A Fish Called Wanda, and sure enough, the building at the left of the photo above is indeed where the Cleese-Curtis “canoodling” rendezvous took place!

The bird we saw more of than any other in England was the pigeon. Not the Common Wood Pigeon (Columba palumbus), like this one in Greenwich, which we saw a fair number of. . .

. . . but the Feral Pigeon or “rock dove” (Columba livia), which was everywhere, both city and country.  There were many of the highly variable domestic color forms, such as this one

. . . . and some of the “wild type”, which is the color pattern of the ancestral wild Rock Doves.

Wild Rock Doves persist in Scotland and western Ireland; all the pigeons we saw in London and Oxfordshire were feral.

11 thoughts on “Readers’ wildlife photos

  1. The egg is almost certainly that of a wood pigeon, which nest year round.
    Older beech trees have rough bark.

    1. I have 16 mature beech trees in my garden and I am surrounded by far more; some are 30+ metres tall. The largest have bark like that. Also notice the spindly branches trailing close to the ground: these are very characteristic of beeches.

  2. Thank you for the wonderful scenes all over England. I love the molehills and sheep. Now I feel like going for a visit.

    Good to see wildlife photos up and running.

  3. Love the Crow on the Great Coxwell Barn. Nice composition!

    Where I grew up on the east coast (of the U.S.) the molehills were almost nothing. But here in the Pacific Northwest they’re huge, at least as big as the ones in your photograph. Don’t water your lawn here unless you want moles.* They appear via spontaneous generation.

    *Most of our neighbors save precious water by dutifully allowing their grass to go brown in summer.

    1. -moles holes are the same in south west bc
      -we have mandatory water restrictions from may 1 to oct 31, regardless of reservoir water levels

  4. Pretty good pics Greg. A corvid for the Win and some pigeons. I like pigeons a lot as Manhattan is infested with them. For awhile during covid I went to feed them in a park near me with my bemused dog.

    They’re part of the scenery here, cool New Yorkers who only flutter out of the way at the last minute. Quite fearless until there’s a hawk, seagull or other Big Shots flying in the area. I love to watch them from my apartment.
    Thx
    D.A.
    NYC

  5. I love your pics. Makes me feel like I’m there. That apartment is one of the few things I remember about A fish called Wanda, since I was very envious.

  6. You aren’t the only one who can’t identify gulls… 🙁

    When I was a new birder, someone pointed out a gull to me, and said I’d have no trouble with that one–it had a black head, and he said it was a Bonaparte’s Gull. Fine and dandy, I thought–until I learned that there are at least 5 species of gulls that have black heads during breeding season! I still can’t tell them apart.

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