Yes. They often bury seeds and acorns. They frequently forget them too.
Blue Jays can fly, or travel, up to 43.66 miles per hour.
Blue Jays can fly up to 30mph. There are found in Northern America, and are part of the Crow & Raven family.
No, it was a no hitter but not a perfect game ... Verlander retired the first 22 batters before giving up a walk to Blue Jays catcher J.P. Arencibia in the 8th inning.
blue jays have hollow bones to make them lightweight, and they have a tail to help them them steer up and down while flying.
Blue jays are noisy, aggresive birds. They feed on most anything organic, and usually travel in loose flocks up to six or more birds.
In 1979, Steve Luebber pitched in 1 game for the Toronto Blue Jays. He gave up 2 hits and 1 earned run, recording no outs.
This is a matter of opinion, of course. What is "unusual"? How about these: - Blue jays often gang up on larger birds, such as hawks, owls, eagles, and crows. This behavior, called "mobbing," tends to drive the predators away from the blue jays' nests. Other birds also do this, perhaps especially jays and crows. - In addition to the familiar, rasping "jay" calls, blue jays have a rather musical call that is usually rendered as "queeble-queeble." If you expect the screaming, raucous "jay-jay," you might not even believe that the "queeble-queeble" is coming from the same bird.
Yes of course! Look up a picture of one on Google Images; their feathers are a couple different shades of blue, with white trim and a white belly.
Blue jays typically fly in a series of up and down strokes interspersed with glides. They are known for their quick and agile flight, which allows them to navigate through trees and forests with ease. Blue jays also use their long tail to help them steer and balance while flying.
Well, if you look it up real simple on google or something like that it will tell you that blue jays eat baby birds. And a chicken is a bird. So, ya, I would say blue jays eat baby chickens
The Blue Jays released him and no one wants to pick him up so he retired. Made alot money.
That was former Dodgers and Angels pitcher Bill Singer. Singer gave up 11 hits and 4 runs in 4 1/3 innings but the Blue Jays still won, 9-5, against the White Sox.