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Monday, November 18, 2013

Blue Jay, Orlando, Florida

Check out these blue jay bird images:

Blue Jay, Orlando, Florida
blue jay bird

Image by Rick Leche
Please view LARGE? Is there many more beautiful birds than a Blue Jay?

One of the few birds that I saw while attending the Photoshop World Conference in Orlando. We don’t see these on the West Coast so this was welcome and beautiful Life List addition!

"The Blue Jay is the clown and scoffer of birdland. Furthermore, he is one of the handsomest of American birds; also he is one of the wickedest, and therein exemplifies the literal truth of the saying " Fine feathers don’t make fine birds."

Many have been the attempts to write the Jay down a rascal, and not a few the efforts to rehabilitate and exculpate him. But after all has been said by his defenders, the ugly fact remains, as Mr. Job says, that the bird " has all the mischievous, destructive, thieving traits of the Crow, and with a lot of audacity or ‘cheek’ thrown in for good measure."

There can be no doubt that he is a persistent and merciless nest-robber–that he eats the eggs and kills and devours the young of smaller and defenseless birds. Eloquent testimony concerning the commission of these crimes is furnished by the outcry set up by such birds, whenever they catch a Jay lurking near their nests.

But we need not take the birds’ word alone for it, because he has been caught red-handed by man, more than once, in the very perpetration of these villainies.

Yet even those who know and condemn the ways of Jays, are forced to admit that he is an amusing rascal. In the nesting season he is comparatively little in evidence, not only because he has his own family affairs to attend to, but because he devotes a good deal of his time to his cannibalistic practices, concerning which he is anxious to keep the rest of the feathered world in ignorance. But once his family responsibilities are discharged, and there are no more nests to be robbed, his whole demeanor changes, and he becomes the noisiest and most obstreperous creature in the woods.

" Here comes a fool; look out for him!" he yells, as you enter the woods; and all the rest of his brethren promptly take up the hue and cry. And let anybody who supposes that Jays can’t swear, and employ the most variegated vilification and the most fluent Billingsgate, just stand by and listen to the maledictions of a flock of them as they mob their arch-enemy, the Great Horned Owl.
That the Jay has a sense of humor — which is not common among our birds — also seems very obvious. Often it is humor of the grim kind, but not always, as will be appreciated by those who have read "Baker’s Blue Jay Story," in Mark Twain’s Tramp Abroad. Here we have a most amusing yarn about how a Jay tried to fill up a deserted cabin with acorns; how he worked and swore as the nuts disappeared through the knot-hole in the roof; how one of the flock of Jays who had -been attracted by his " devotions," discovered what he had been trying to do, by looking in through the open door, and promptly had a spasm; how the other Jays took a look, one by one, with the same result, and how the whole flock then sat around in the trees and guffawed over the joke — all of this is not merely amusing; it is good ornithology in so far as it reports the way a Jay acts.

James Whitcomb Riley also sketched him accurately when he said (in "Knee Deep in June ")

Mr. Blue Jay, full o’ sass,
In them base-ball clothes of his,
Sportin’ round the orchard jes’
Like he owned the premises.

Incidentally it ought to be recorded that the Jay’s kleptomaniacal and hiding propensities serve a useful purpose, for they prompt him to carry away and conceal acorns and chestnuts under !eaves and in the grass and in hollow trees, with the result that when a forest of conifers is cut away, chestnuts and oaks are likely to appear from the nuts which have been hidden by these birds — and the squirrels. This service, unconscious though it be, ought not to be ignored, even as we reflect, when we remember the boisterous good nature and the clown-like ways of the Jay, that a bird, as well as a man, may " smile and smile and be a villain still."

"That a Blue Jay! Nonsense! " many people exclaim, when told that a very melodious, Bell-like note coming from a thicket is one of the calls of a bird whose sole vocal accomplishment, as far as they know, is his harsh cry of Thief, thief! But he frequently sounds this note and many others that are really musical, besides which he has considerable skill as a ventriloquist and as a mimic. In the latter capacity witness his frequent and almost perfect imitation of the whistled scream of the Red-shouldered Hawk, which many will insist is a deliberate attempt to terrify the other birds, and is perfectly in keeping with the Jay’s love of a practical joke.

Stomach analysis indicates that about three-fourths (76%) of the Jay’s food consists of vegetable matter and that most of this is acorns, chestnuts, beechnuts, and the like. Such noxious insects as wood-boring beetles, grasshoppers, eggs of various caterpillars, and scale insects constitute about 19 and 1/2% of his food. Predacious beetles contribute about 3 and 1/2%. This leaves but I per cent. for the birds and eggs, the mice, fish, salamanders, snails, and crustaceans, that make up the remainder of his diet. The Jay does not eat the seeds of poison ivy or poison sumac and the distribution of these seeds cannot be charged to him.

The preceding humourous sketch of the Blue Jay was from:

goodfelloweb.com/birds/perching/thrushes/bluejay.html

Blue jay with a treat
blue jay bird

Image by afagen
Blue jay (Cyanocitta cristata) at Wakodahatchee Wetlands, Delray Beach, FL (Palm Beach County Water Utilities Department)



Tags:Blue, Florida, Orlando

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