What a jay day!
Amateur Gardening|January 15, 2022
Val spots an exotic visitor at her garden bird station
Val Bourne
What a jay day!

EXCITEMENT, excitement, and more excitement! We have had a new visitor to the feeding station – a jay feasting on fat balls. I think it’s a young one because it’s slender and frisky. I remember that I was like that once, honest! It bobs over our lawn, looking rather like a green woodpecker when it moves, before flying up and taking a sizable chunk of food at a time. The flash of electric-blue feathers clearly shows, along with a black mustache, although most of the feathers are a warm pinkish-brown.

Jays, handsome and acrobatic members of the crow family, have a wonderful Latin name – Garrulus glandarius. This translates as ‘chattering birds producing acorns’, apparently. One jay can cache up to 5,000 acorns in autumn, if there are plenty around. I’ve often watched jays burying their acorns in the field beyond the cottage, but they also store them in crevices in tree trunks. I’m guessing that most of the acorns in the field near me get eaten during winter because we don’t have a forest of oak saplings springing up in front of the cottage.

This story is from the January 15, 2022 edition of Amateur Gardening.

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This story is from the January 15, 2022 edition of Amateur Gardening.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.