We often hear this Song Thrush singing in the Flower Walk, but it's usually invisible in a treetop. Today it appeared lower down in a holly tree.
A Robin in the corkscrew hazel bush scolded a Magpie.
A family of Greenfinches jumped around in a holly tree near Peter Pan and I managed to get three of them in the same picture.
A flock of Long-Tailed Tits ranged around the Diana memorial car park. This is one of the teenagers.
A Jay beside the Long Water waited to swoop down for a peanut.
A young Carrion Crow drinking from the Serpentine had white patches, the sign of a poor diet of junk food scavenged from bins.
The Grey Heron at the Lido restaurant raided a table. It had difficulty with a slice of pizza but chips were a great success.
The newest brood of herons on the Serpentine island are growing fast. This is the sixth nest in a record breeding season at the small heronry.
Pigeon Eater had caught his latest victim near the boat hire platform.
The Mute Swan family returned to the Long Water after their father had led an expedition on to the Serpentine to beat up the other swans.
A Egyptian Goose examined a fallen fruit under one of the plum trees at the Triangle, but found it too unripe to eat.
The Mandarin family on the Round Pond went ashore to graze on the grass, which is dry but still nutritious. The smallest duckling got left on the edge but hurried to catch up with the others.
Three Buff-Tailed Bumblebees crowded on to an eryngium flower east of the Lido.
Duncan Campbell and Annette rescued a Willow Emerald damselfly that had got caught in a spider's web.
He sent some pictures where he was uncertain about the species. This is probably an Ornate-Tailed Digger Wasp.
One of the little Colletes bees in the Rose Garden. There are a lot of similar species but this very clear picture might be enough to identify it.
And this seems likely to be a Four-Banded Flower Bee, which would be a new find in the park. It wouldn't pose for a good picture, but here are the best two he managed before it flew off.