Here’s the latest I could verify about swans nesting at Hampstead Heath.
- A Guardian report from May 27, 2026 notes that swimmers were urged to stay out of a Hampstead Heath pond to protect nesting swans and their young during peak nesting season. The article references signs designating certain ponds as wildlife conservation areas where swimming is prohibited, and highlights calls from conservation groups like the RSPB for people to respect nesting birds and use designated swimming areas.[1]
- BBC coverage around the same period discusses a broader Hampstead Heath wildlife sanctuary project aimed at giving wetland species (including swans) a safer refuge by reducing human disturbance, which aligns with ongoing efforts to protect nesting birds on the Heath.[3][7]
- City of London communications in early 2026 also announced work on a wildlife sanctuary at Hampstead Heath, including measures such as removing a causeway to create secure nesting spaces for ducks, coots, grebes, and swans, and expanding reedbed and wildflower habitats.[6]
- The coverage from the Standard on May 27, 2026 echoes these concerns, noting that heatwave conditions led to more visitors at wildlife ponds, with nesting swans and their cygnets exposed to disturbance from non-designated swimming areas and social media activity.[5]
If you’d like, I can pull a concise timeline of events and provide direct quotes, or summarize what the sanctuary work means for swans’ nesting success on Hampstead Heath. I can also monitor for further updates and share them as they’re published.