
Dear Readers, it was such a beautiful afternoon on Thursday that I decided to take a walk in St James’s Park, en route to the Linnean Society in Burlington House. This park holds a host of memories for me – Mum used to work at a solicitor’s office off Jermyn Street, so we would sometimes meet up at lunchtime and sit on a bench. Even earlier than this, I remember visiting as a child, and seeing the ‘bird man’, who would stand on the bridge in the park and ‘summon’ literally hundreds of sparrows. And once, I sat and watch a starling murmuration over the island in the middle of the lake. These days, you’re hard-pushed to spot a sparrow, and the starlings have been moved on to goodness knows where. However, the squirrels still run up to you with a hopeful expression, and there are plenty of mallards and coots and moorhens. But where are the famous pelicans?

Gargi the pelican
Well, due to avian flu five of the six pelicans are living in an enclosure on Duck Island in the middle of the lake, but Gargi has decided that she likes being free more than she likes her companions, so she is hanging out with the ducks and coots. What extraordinary creatures pelicans are! They are at the upper limit of size for flying birds – the bigger a bird is, the larger their wings and flight muscles need to be, and the more the bird weighs, which makes taking off difficult. But pelicans can be very acrobatic in flight – I watched brown pelicans off the coast of California diving into the Pacific like arrows, and very impressive it was too.

Gargi has an interesting history. She was found in a garden in Southend in 1996, and appears to have originally been a wild bird who got lost on migration, probably from the south of France. She was brought to the park to recover, and has lived there ever since.

The pelicans are very adaptable creatures, and are clearly opportunists: although in normal times the group of six pelicans is fed every day at 2.30, one of them decided to also take a trip to London Zoo, in time to scoop up the fish that were being fed to the penguins. You’ll often also see the pelicans standing on the benches next to someone who is feeding the geese, which is a rather anxiety-provoking experience – close up, these are very large birds. They also scoop up and eat the occasional pigeon, much to the horror of passersby.
St James’s Park is also home to some truly magnificent London Plane trees…

and has in recent years put in a reed bed, which looked spectacular in the late afternoon sunlight.

So, a really lovely walk that reminded me why I love my city so much – there are few places that have so much green space bang smack in the middle of town, and it was good to see so many people relaxing and enjoying themselves, especially against the backdrop of what sometimes feels like a world gone mad.









































