Grey Herons are quite vague about building nests, and it's surprising that they can make such large ones. One of the pair in the nest at the west end of the island picked up a twig, dithered around with it, and put it back in more or less the same place.
A pair of Herring Gulls called affectionately to each other. The female sitting down is a sign of willingness to nest. They won't nest here, most likely in the Paddington rooftop colony north of the park.
Pigeon Eater and his mate were together on the Dell restaurant roof again. She is in front here, with him dozing behind.
Yet another pair of Mute Swans, 4HQY and 4HDA, were trying out the nesting basket east of the Lido. They only stayed for a couple of minutes before leaving.
It's not clear whether the swans mistrust the nesting baskets or whether they just don't feel like nesting yet, probably the latter. The boss swan and his mate, here seen near the bridge, haven't shown much interest in their private nesting island.
The comings and goings of Shovellers during their winter visit are unpredictable. A couple of weeks ago there were only four, now it's up to two dozen. But we never have as many as a decade ago, before the new Thames-side reserves lured them away: 50 was routine and once there were 200.
Ahmet Amerikali photographed three birds within a few yards of each other around the clump of alders at the foot of Buck Hill near the Italian Garden: a Green Woodpecker ...
... A Cetti's Warbler ...
... and a Long-Tailed Tit.
There are two camellia bushes behind the Albert Memorial, a pink-flowered one and a white-flowered one. We've already had a picture of a Great Tit in the white bush, and today there was another in the pink one.
A Blue Tit looked down from a small hawthorn in the Rose Garden.
The Coal Tits in the corkscrew hazel in the Dell ...
... have had no difficulty evading the jealous Robin, and it seems to have given up trying to stop them.
The male Chaffinch from the Rose Garden was waiting in a tree on the north edge ...
... and the female in the Flower Walk was in a bush. Both seem to have lost their mates.
The female Pied Wagtail was at Fisherman's Keep, today without her mate but he's seen much less than she is.
A Starling shone in the sun on the railings of the Lido restaurant.
A Jay waited for a peanut in a tree by the Vista.
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