Showing posts with label blue jay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blue jay. Show all posts

Friday, March 11, 2011

Bird Signs - Jay

This week's bird card that I picked is the Jay.

Photo by chefranden

We have a lot of jays around us - and I see and hear them most days. This week, however, as I went to my studio, we have a planter by the door and as I walked near it - both a squirrel and a blue jay jumped out from there. They looked very guilty like they were up to something together. I chatted to them and asked them what they were up to, but the jay flew off noisily and the squirrel went up the oak tree.  Strangely enough, the same thing happened the next day, and also a few other days during the week.  It was like the squirrel and jay hang out together. I'm guessing they were both after acorns but it seemed sweet to see them together ..

The night after my second sighting of them, I had a dream that I had a pet squirrel called Harriet, but that she got away.....  I walked for ages calling her and asking her to come back, but she didn't. Maybe she went looking for Jay???? 

Photo by Willie Lunchmeat
So I guess choosing the jay card was timely this week. The Jay is a member of the crow family and is noisy and intelligent. However, when nesting and communicating with a mate, they use a "whisper song" - a soft sweet warble.  The book says that if the jay appears to you, perhaps the suggestion is to use you sweetest voice with your loved ones...or maybe you need to use a louder voice to make your voice heard by others.

Jays like to rummage at picnic areas and campsites so the card suggests that it is time to pack a picnic, a blanket and a loved one and head out to appreciate the simplicity of life.  Maybe that's what I'll do tomorrow if the weather is nice???

Photo by Yandi
As a follow up to last week's cards when it was indicating that I would find my life purpose with an eagle as my guide.... I'm afraid I haven't got it all figured out (!!!)...yet....  but it did make me think a lot about it and I continue to do so...and have taken steps to do a few new things too.

Have you seen a specific bird today? If so, let me know what it was and I'll see what the signs book says.

In the meantime, let's hope Harriet the squirrel and Jay the Jay are enjoying each others company!!!

Monday, June 7, 2010

Monday's Millinery Musings - A confession

By guest blogger Jennifer
Jennifer's Etsy Store

It may have been the balmy evening spent under the arbor - the first dinner of the season enjoyed outside - or maybe the rich food, delicious wine and excellent company. Whatever it was that made me do it, I made this confession with no apologies: I like blue jays. I take that back. I love blue jays. To be exact I love the jays in my backyard: the Western Scrub-Jay, and the Stellar's Jays that Dave and I run into when we hike the hills around Point Reyes near our home in Northern California.




Now, I can hear the human cry go up, just like it did the other night at the dinner table. If you are appalled  by this confession you would be in good company. Mr. Audubon referred to the blue jay as a rogue, a thief and a knave. A knave? An unprincipled, crafty man..er.. bird? A rogue? An unprincipled, playfully, mischievous scamp? Okay, okay, maybe there is a drop of truth to these accusations. As if all this weren't defaming enough, he accused them of mischief, selfishness, duplicity, and yes, malice! It certainly tarnishes their reputation. If they had one. 

Frankly, I'm a bit disappointed in Mr. Audubon's unfairness and lack of dispassion, if you consider him the Ultimate Birder. He did begrudgingly allow as how jays are beautiful and cheerful.
 
Jays in my garden
 
This is the very thing I love about them: they are cheerful. Of course they are beautiful, but looks aren't everything. I like to think of them as cavalier: haughty, arrogant, carefree and gay. I laugh at their antics every day, several times a day, and in this serious old world, to laugh every day thanks to a bird is a miracle. Besides, they are described as having "light gray underpants". Sort of fits.

It turns out that most of the charges leveled against blue jays are unfounded. The bit about eating other bird eggs (the main item that ruffles feathers so to speak) occurs only occasionally when their regular vegetable diet (estimated at about %75) of acorns, seeds and nuts is compromised. Of course, jays will eat almost anything edible: caterpillars, grasshoppers, and beetles. We have known them to patrol the plaza a few blocks from our house snatching tidbits (thieves?) from the tourists. One summer we found melting pats of butter in our rain gutter, still in their gold foil paper. In same rain gutter a small sunflower bloomed thanks to a blue jay.

Earlier this spring a family of jays made a home in our hedge. This rowdy band of adolescents have been hanging around our garden ever since. They are big teens now and hungry all the time but seem to lack gathering skills. Every so often the mother will drop a worm their way but she is trying to get them to be independent. Mostly they hang together as a gang, practice their hawk imitations (a practical joke they play on the other birds and they are good at it) fight over sticks and leaves, (as if there aren't a billion of those in a garden),  and make lots of boy noises: odd, raspy, scolding and/or weep calls at one another. In other words: a racket.

They jays have also befriended our garden Ganesh. It's a trying relationship for him.


Our long-suffering Ganesh is a pillar of patience with the jays. He allows them to sharpen their beaks on his hat. This is perilous since he is made of soft tuffa stone and tiny chunks of his ears routinely fall to earth. His hat/helmut is in a dreadful state. (You know how I would feel about that! ) They perch on his shoulder, and enter into countess scrapes and squabbles at his feet. Just yesterday a jay opened its beak wide enough for me to see its little pink gullet as it tried to swallow the spike on Ganesh's helmet! How ridiculous! How funny! Honestly, for sheer comedy I'll take a jay any day over a circumspect towhee or a mild mannered finch.


I know you have an opinion. Please do let me know if I have changed your mind even a millimeter about blue jays, and if not, I'd especially like to hear that too. Go on, I can take it!