Gardening
Jay (Garrulus glandarius) taken a few years ago
It was a beautiful day yesterday, and the sun is shining brightly again, today. though not as warmly. Therefore, out into the garden we ventured to bring the wilderness into some sort of order. That entailed pruning (polite word for savaging) several innocent shrubs and trees. We have an hour’s extra daylight now. I jest – it’s only half an hour.
Anyway, it looks a little tidier now. There’s still much to do, but, oh, boy! I ache. I must be getting old. (Must I? Do I have to?)
There is much activity outside. Butterflies flutter by, birds sing fit to bust and chase each other round and round, and squirrels scamper through the still bare oak tree highways.
For three days now, a jay (Garrulus glandarius) has visited our garden. It’s unusual at this time of year. We see them in the autumn, when they’re collecting and caching acorns, a habit responsible for the rapid spread of oak trees after the last Ice Age, around 115,000 to 11,700 years ago (that was a cruel, harsh winter!)
It was probably eating insects. Fortunately, it is too early for the stag beetles to emerge – they are in enough danger without becoming a tasty snack.
Jays are the most colourful of the European corvids and always a joy to see. They are shy, woodland birds, unlike their bold strutting relatives, the smartly dressed magpies, and the clever, cunning, soberly clad crows and jackdaws.
Jay is an archaic term, from the early seventeenth century, for a foolish or dim-witted person. In the 1900s, in the US, it was used to describe an unworldly person, particularly from a rural area, not accustomed to the hustle and bustle of city life, and unaware of the dangers inherent in crossing a busy road.
From that meaning arose the term, ‘jaywalking.’ Jaywalking, or crossing a road against the lights, or not at a designated crossing, or simply, carelessly, is frowned upon in many cultures and can lead to a fine.
Popinjay derives from an Arabic word, babbagha, meaning parrot. A person described as a popinjay was considered conceited and overly absorbed with their appearance. It also indicated someone who talked much but said little of import, an empty sounding vessel. It was in common use for several hundred years, from the thirteenth to the nineteenth centuries. It is a word which could be brought back usefully into the modern lexicon.
‘Jay’ is also modern slang for a joint, or hand-rolled cigarette containing cannabis.

Ha ha...you are quite right: "Popinjay" could certainly be brought out of retirement in these days. Your jays are quite, quite, different than what we call "Blue Jays" here. The latter are large, showy (and, yes, strikingly handsome) birds but ones I wish would relocate somewhere else. The are LOUD...and have a grating, ugly, call (I'm not even going to bother calling it a "song") and they are MEAN...they will chase and bully other birds to no end. I'd willing trade you your jays for ours.
ReplyDeleteI have seen photographs of your blue jays and they really are most striking and beautiful. Our jays do not have musical voices either!
DeleteYour jay is a lovely bird. I didn't know there was such a thing as a shy jay! We have Steller's jays and they fit the bossy, bold, mischievous personality to a T.
ReplyDeleteIt's not shy about stealing nestlings, but steers well away from humans.
DeleteWe have Blue Jays here and they are quite loud and raucous birds and often bullies at the feeders, but they are ever on the alert for hawks and are quick to alert the other birds when a Cooper's Hawk is in the neighborhood. Thus they earn their way, I suppose.
ReplyDeleteI quite agree that "popinjay" is a word that could be used to describe more than one person that I can think of on the modern scene. Particularly certain individuals from the world of politics...
Jays earn their place in the world. Not sure about popinjays, though.
DeleteHere in the redwoods, we have stellar jays. They are characters. I looked up your Garrulus glandarius Jays and the Stellar Jays are distant relatives.
ReplyDeleteInteresting!
DeleteLook at the small area of beautiful blue feathers on the jay. Tiny but perfect.
ReplyDeleteIt's a striking, beautiful blue.
DeleteA delightful glimpse of Eurasian jay and garden toil where aching limbs, bright birdsong, and the quiet industry of nature conspire to remind us that even the smallest acts of tending keep us intimately woven into the turning seasons.
ReplyDeleteIt is good to feel part of Nature, if just for a short period.
DeleteDo the birds chase each other because they want to be very special friends with another bird?
ReplyDeleteYour jay is a very pretty bird.
I am sure my grandparents used to call ravens, jays.
I am so out of touch with modern young things that I didn't know joints can be called jays.
I can't imagine what you mean, Andrew - the birds are just playing.
DeleteI hadn't heard of Jay being a handrolled cannabis joint... I've led such a sheltered life i probably wouldn't recognise the smell of cannabis anyway.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't, either!
DeleteJay's are beautiful birds, we see them here occasionally, we do see a few more woodland birds here since a small area was cut back a couple of years ago.
ReplyDeleteIt's the beautiful flash of blue that's so noticeable.
DeleteIt feels good to get a bit of gardening, cleaning done. Enjoy your bird parade
ReplyDeleteIt's not much, but a little each day gets the job done.
DeleteI know what you mean about aches caused by gardening. We are at the point where we still love the garden, the gardening not so much. I think of a Jay as a shy, woodland bird, so a visitor to the garden seems quite exceptional. And very enjoyable.
ReplyDeleteOur garden is not designed to be easily maintained - our fault entirely, but we wanted to attract as much wildlife as possible.
DeleteYesterday was also a garden tidying day up here. Lots of snipping and pruning going on.
ReplyDeleteIt's very satisfying to see your progress, isn't it?
DeleteI had no idea jaywalking and popinjay came from the bird Jays.. we have a lot of blue Jays, loud and bossy and they attack other birds. they are beautiful. I am aching also, raking leaves and scooping leaves out of the pool hurt my back a lot. our Florida trees lose their leaves in the spring, oak and avocado push off old leaves when new ones come in. makes a hug mess of pollen covered trees, old and new leaves
ReplyDeleteTrees are a mixed blessing, but so lovely to see.
DeleteOur jays in the eastern United States are much more blue. Are Cardinals have been singing like crazy and I've certainly seen our woodpeckers in pairs going up and down our trees together. I spent an hour outside pulling weeds also. But it did require two layers of clothes and a coat. One day it'll warm up I'm sure.
ReplyDeleteGood gracious, how did you manage to move? Keep believing it will warm up one day . . . ☀️🌞
DeleteDon't think I've ever seen any of that kind here.
ReplyDeleteWe have woodland not far from us, so see a variety of birds.
DeleteIt doesn't take much yard work for me to start aching. I just don't have it in me anymore. Lovely picture of the Jay
ReplyDeleteI think the trick is to take things more slowly. The trouble is that if I slow up much more I'll seize up completely!
DeleteThat’s interesting, especially about jaywalking. I haven’t heard the last usage that you mentioned. I wonder if it has become slang over here too
ReplyDeleteI don't know. I'll have to ask my younger relatives . . .
DeleteYes, the recent spell of good weather has seen many out in the garden ...
ReplyDeleteI like Jay's they are beautiful birds, occasionally they visit the garden.
All the best Jan
It feels so good to be outside, listening to the birds - It's only spoilt by the lawnmowers, out in force! 😀
DeleteWe have blue jays. The males are striking, brilliant blue. They have a raucous call and tend to chase smaller birds away.
ReplyDeleteYour jays are a glorious colour.
DeleteWe have bluejays not these little birds. I love that meaning behind "jaywalking" and the unworldly reference. I guess I'd be a jay bird not a dicky bird....teehee
ReplyDeleteOur jays are quite a bit bigger than blue jays, I've just discovered. Both very pretty.
DeleteI live to see a Jay, but they don’t seem to hang out in our part of Devon, in Wales we had regular visits from Jays.
ReplyDeleteAlison in Devon x
I wonder why that is? They must be hiding!
DeleteUseful information! Our steller jays are bold and brash and the prettiest blue ever invented. One summer a baby jay adopted me and did come back for two summers, then no more. He was adorable.
ReplyDeleteI got fined for jay walking. If there are no cars why not? I do not understand "laws" vs common sense.
Thank you for this post, it will be stashed in my "cool" file!
As it is often said, the law is an ass!
DeleteWe have a jay bird that is really enjoying chasing the squirrels right now. Actually...the bird is being very aggressive. Spring brings much work and around here, there is a lot to do.
ReplyDeleteSpring is busy and summer is even busier.
DeleteWe have all kinda of birds visiting our yard and this morning we woke up to four deer basking in the sun.
ReplyDeleteThat is a wonderful gift. My mother used to get deer in her garden, but there's no way in for them here.
DeleteThe jays always used to feast off the ant nests in the lawn, a quietly spectacular bird.
ReplyDeleteThat must have been a superb sight. Not so happy for the ants, of course. 🐜🐜🐜
DeleteJays are intelligent interesting critters. Apparently they remember where they have stashed the acorns.
ReplyDeleteI love all the corvids. They're not everyone's favourite bird family, but I admire their intelligence.
DeleteDid you say butterflies?! It's still negative degrees here in northwestern Canada, sigh.
ReplyDeleteNever mind - spring will come, though you do seem to have to wait a very long time for it.
DeleteI love those European jays. We get them here occasionally. I should probably "savage" my shrubs more.
ReplyDeleteYour shrubs look fine, just right for squirrels and nesting birds.
DeleteWhat a handsome bird!
ReplyDeleteI think so, too.
DeleteEnjoy spring!-Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteThank you - you, too.
DeleteVery nice photo of the Jay. It's always nice to get the garden in order.
ReplyDeleteWe've only scratched the surface, but we will persist.
DeleteYou have such colourful birds! For some reason I always thought Jaywalking meant crossing a street diagonally instead of going straight across.
ReplyDeleteJaywalking sounds as though it should be diagonal, I agree.
DeleteIt sounds like you had a magical garden day
ReplyDeleteIt was warm and very pleasant.
DeleteWho would have though there are so many meanings to the word 'jay". I am enjoying the change in weather this week.
ReplyDeleteMake the most of it - there's a change coming, unfortunately. 😟
DeleteJays have been thriving here, as have magpies since shooting them was banned in the 1970s. With jays, I have observed first hand how their behaviour has evolved in just a few short decades: Whereas during my childhood they were really shy woodland birds and rarely to be seen, already in the 1990s they started to move closer to where people lived, nest in their gardens and in parks that were well frequented by human visitors. Of course it is the other way round - humans encroached on their habitat, so they had not much choice in the matter.
ReplyDeleteThat is very true. If only everyone appreciated that.
DeleteWhen Justin Hayward and John Lodge performed by themselves, they called themselves The Blue Jays! They were from The Moody Blues, so I love that! We have our blue jays here in America, they are rather large and loud and a bit greedy if they come to bird feeders. Some don't like them but we do. They are just jays being jays!
ReplyDeleteYes, birds will be birds and make life interesting.
DeleteThank you for sharing your photo of the Jay and teaching us about them. We get a lot of them in our garden. Glad you were able to do some work in your garden too. I am looking forward to our clocks changing and being able to do the same thing.
ReplyDeleteI hope your spring brings warmth and peace - you deserve it.
DeleteI thought Garrulus Glandarius was a wizard in the Harry Potter series though I must admit that I have never read these books. Once I tried to read "Harry Potter & The Philosopher's Stone" but I gave up after fifty pages. It was terribly written and very boring. My older brother Paul was fined for jaywalking in Hull in 1966. There was a short newspaper report about his heinous crime on the front page of "The Hull Daily Mail". He brought such shame upon our family.
ReplyDeleteI cannot get on with the Harry Potter books - you did well to read fifty pages!
ReplyDeleteYay, not just me! I tried. Ten pages of that leaden thudding predictable rhythm and I was done.
DeleteHi Janice - good for you both ... exercise and fresh air. I haven't read the Harry Potter books either ... love the Jay - they are so pretty ... cheers Hilary
ReplyDeleteI felt very virtuous! 😇
DeleteThey are really beautiful birds. I got to photograph one in the park last year while visiting sister. Sounds like the weather has been quite nice and spring has sprung
ReplyDeleteIt has been very pleasant, but is changing . . . 😟
ReplyDelete