If you mean Blue Jay Navel Oranges that come in the box with the beautiful, colourful artwork, then they come from Johnston Farms, in the San Joaquin Valley, California. Check out their website.
Also note that there are NO Blue Jays (the bird) in California, except when the Toronto Blue Jays play there. Blue Jays are not West of the Rockies. Many Californians think they have Blue Jays there but they are really seeing Stellar's Jays or Western Scrub Jays. People here in Vancouver, BC (where I live) also make the same mistake.
Also, I think the picture of the Blue Jay on the Johnston Farms box is not quite anatomically correct. Their picture shows the head crest too prominent and the bill of the real bird does not have such a pronounced droop. Not surprizing since they don't have the real bird to draw from in CA -- or maybe they do and Pamela Anderson's plastic surgeon and PeeWee Herman's hairdresser have gotten at it!
yes a blue jay is a bird
Jay Blue is 6' 3".
The Canada jay is gray and white, the blue jay is blue and gray and white, the Stellar's jay is similar to the blue jay but has a blackish head, scrub jays are blue and gray.
The scientific name of a blue jay is Cyanocitta cristata.
Blue Jay - comics - was created in 1971.
Operation Blue Jay was created in 1953.
A Blue Jay is a bird, has a spine, so is a vertebrate.
The blue jay is not a state bird at all.
They got their name because they are blue and they yell out jay!
A blue jay
That is the correct spelling of "blue jay" (sometimes capitalized).
No, a blue jay is not a herbivore. Blue jays are omnivores, meaning they eat a variety of foods including fruits, nuts, seeds, insects, and occasionally small animals like frogs or mice.