Another sunny day and the park was crowded, so again there were no surprises, except perhaps to see a Wren hopping about in a bush overhanging the lake at the edge of the Vista.
The Robin at Mount Gate was unnerved by the passing people, and lurked in a bush.
The one by the Buck Hill shelter is much bolder, and came out three times for pine nuts.
They were all fluffed up against the cold, but none more than the southwest corner of the bridge, which was nearly spherical.
The small birds in the Rose Garden were also mostly staying away, but at least there was a Blue Tit in the little hawthorn tree ...
... and a Coal Tit in a rose bush.
It was the same at Mount Gate, with a Blue Tit in the wintersweet ...
... and a Coal Tit in the magnolia.
A Magpie near the Vista looked fine in the weak winter sunshine.
A male Feral Pigeon on the shore of the Serpentine puffed himself up and paraded in front of a female. She wasn't in the mood, and started preening to show that she had better things to do.
The Pied Wagtail was busy at Fisherman's Keep.
Pigeon Eater was taking a break from hunting by the Dell restuarant.
There were two Grey Herons on a dead branch at the island, but nesting attempts seem to have been abandoned for now. It's still possible that something is happening out of sight in one of the high nests.
A pair of Great Crested Grebes were making territorial calls on the Long Water side of the bridge ...
... answered by another on the other side. They couldn't see each other because of the pontoons, but these are no obstacle to a grebe which can dive under them and come up the other side in seconds.
Yesterday Duncan Campbell saw the Black Swan on one of the new nest baskets, shuffling straw around. He has absolutely no chance of enticing 4GIQ to nest here.
The killer Mute Swan was on the Serpentine pointlessly bullying some swans that were just minding their own business.
If you stop, even for a moment, by the railings at the Henry Moore sculpture, the resident Egyptian Geese trot over expecting you to feed them.
Jenna has been visited by a mysterious bug. It looks like a Cotton Bug, one of a number of Dysdercus species. If so, it's seriously exotic. They damage cotton plants but are otherwise harmless. It may have arrived in a sack of peanuts, possibly from the southern United States. Or, of course, it may be something completely different. Does anyone have any ideas?










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