I've seen other birds do this behavior as the Blue Jay. I would agree with 
SeEtta. I think it might be a process of sunbathing.

 

Tina Jones
 


Date: Thu, 5 Nov 2009 17:59:45 -0700
Subject: [cobirds] Re: Blue Jay behavior
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]

If the location was in the sun, I would suspect the jay was engaged in sunning 
behavior which many species engage in.

SeEtta Moss



On Thu, Nov 5, 2009 at 9:45 AM, Hugh and Urling Kingery <[email protected]> wrote:



Roy Hohn posed what he calls "A strange behavior question." Do any Cobirders 
have theories about this kind of behavior? 
 
Hugh Kingery
 
  "On August 21 I watched a blue jay land on the mulch in our back yard.  It 
spread its tail and wings, like it was making a tent, and ducked its head 
beneath the wings.  It stayed motionless for about 30 seconds and then flew 
away.  A few minutes later I watched a repeat of the same behavior.  We saw a 
similar behavior at Lake Manyara in Tanzania, with an ibis (I think it was an 
ibis.)  But the ibis was in shallow water and using the behavior as a strategy 
to catch fish and small critters in the water.  What was the blue jay doing?  I 
walked back and examined the area later, but saw nothing unusual - like a 
colony of ants or some other insects it could eat."

Roy Hohn        [email protected]
suburban Centennial, near Arapahoe and Colorado Blvd.
 


 







                                          
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