...Like the Canada Jays they appear to be wholly fearless and pay littleor no attention to the presence of mankind...
Chester A. Reed 「The Bird Book」
...Not only are therooks there in legions, having their rookeries inthe park, but, throughout the forest, daws, carrioncrows, jays, and magpies are abundant...
W. H. Hudson 「Birds and Man」
...I would have got a shot at the deer if my attention had not been called in the wrong direction by the chirping of several blue jays which I thought were excited over the presence of the white deer...
Eldred Nathaniel Woodcock 「Fifty Years a Hunter and Trapper」
...Not alone are they savedthe trouble of making one, but a deep tunnel in a tree-trunk meanssecurity for their babies against hawks, crows, jays, and other foes,as well as against wind and rain...
Neltje Blanchan 「Birds Every Child Should Know」
...While the Crows and Jays are technically 'Song Birds' their voicesare far from musical...
Frank M. Chapman 「Color Key to North American Birds」
...However, everyfarmer finds a quantity of weed seeds upon cleaning his seedgrain, which proves very acceptable to chickadees and blue jays...
Albert F. Siepert 「Bird Houses Boys Can Build」
...Two true jays, however, are common in the Western Himalayas...
Douglas Dewar 「Birds of the Indian Hills」
...On their own heath theyare as noisy as any of our Jays, and apparently far more sociable, anumber of pairs frequently nesting close to each other in a small oakgrove...
Various 「Birds Illustrated by Color Photograph [April, 1897]」
...Dickerman saw Mexican Jays in the Sierra del Pino on May 12, 1954; 16 mi...
Emil K. Urban 「Birds from Coahuila, Mexico」
...They include, therefore, the Crows, Jays, and Woodpeckers; historically and practically a most important order of creatures to man...
John Ruskin 「Love's Meinie」
... The jays have their enemies also, and need to keep an eye on their own eggs...
John Burroughs 「Birds and Bees, Sharp Eyes and, Other Papers」
... Jays and catbirdsquarrel constantly, and marsh-wrens keep up never-ending chatter...
Gene Stratton-Porter 「The Song of the Cardinal」
...Blue jays, myrtle warblers (Dendroicacoronata), tufted titmice, and summer tanagers frequently foragethrough the crowns...
Henry S. Fitch 「The Forest Habitat of the University of Kansas Natural History Reservation」
...Juncos, two species of jays, and woodpeckerswere seen daily...
Charles L. Douglas 「Comparative Ecology of Pinyon Mice and Deer Mice in Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado」
...We now come to the family of the Corvidæ,the crow family, which includes the Jays, the Magpies andthe Choughs...
Various 「Natural History in Anecdote」
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