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- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!mintaka.lcs.mit.edu!news
- From: dmiller@theory.lcs.mit.edu (Dick and Jill Miller)
- Subject: Re: Birds in the garden
- Message-ID: <1992Dec26.144442.28685@mintaka.lcs.mit.edu>
- Sender: news@mintaka.lcs.mit.edu
- Organization: Laboratory for Computer Science, MIT
- Distribution: na
- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 1992 14:44:42 GMT
- Lines: 53
-
- >In article <1992Dec23.143234.25317@mintaka.lcs.mit.edu> dmiller@theory.lcs.mit.edu (Dick and Jill Miller) writes:
- >>> [deleted]
- >>>
- >>>Be warned that while it's very gratifying to have jays take
- >>>peanuts out of your hand, it won't be long before they're
- >>>demanding peanuts morning, noon, and night.
- >>
- >>He is in Minnesota, if I remember correctly, so he'll have neither Steller
- >>nor Scrub jays, only Blue jays and possibly Grey jays. The Greys are like
- >>Scrub jays; very bold. Bluejays however are quite timid.
- >
- >Ha! I loved your comment about BlueJays being "quite timid" and I
- >have an ex-father-in-law that would heartily debate that issue with
- >you :-)
- >
- >Amusing anecdote: one spring weekend my father-in-law decided that
- >the bluejays weren't going to next in the eaves of "his" garage so he
- >climbed a ladder and with a broom swept their next away and the birds
- >were having a fit, making all sorts of noises, etc.
- >
- >Well, they relocated at the end of the driveway in a HUGE tree and
- >** every single day ** when my father-in-law would exit the back door
- >of the house leading from the kitchen to the driveway/garage, those
- >bluejays would dive bomb him!
- >
- >P.S. They never bothered anyone else in the family; we were all
- > amused by their behavior but I can assure you that my
- > father-in-law didn't think they were charming at all. :-)
-
- Behavior defending a nest (however misguided) is not the same as behavior
- at a feeder or in another situation. Birds generally have on/off toggles
- for behavior. It looks like the defend-the-nest toggle takes precedence
- over other behaviors. An interesting observation.
-
- I have still found that, IN GENERAL, blue jays are very timid. They will
- not come to a feeder if they think they see you moving inside the house.
- They are almost impossible to tame to eat from your hand, etc. (Grey,
- Scrub and Steller's are quite different, it is sometimes hard to beat them
- off.) And you may sometimes find a Blue jay who acts very bold. In most
- cases this bird will have been an orphan raised by humans.
-
- In many ways Blue Jays are like their cousins the American Crows who can
- seem incredibly bold at some times but are VERY, VERY ,VERY cautious and
- suspicious of anything unusual, but will go inside trash cans on garbage
- day and throw things out to find the goodies in the bottom.
-
- --Jill
-
- --
- A. Richard & Jill A. Miller | Miller Microcomputer Services |
- InterNet: dmiller@im.lcs.mit.edu | 61 Lake Shore Road |
- Voice: 508/653-6136, 9am-9pm EasternTZ | Natick, MA 01760-2099, USA |
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