54 CANADA JAY. 



end of the pole within the hut, which seldom fails to drive the birds high 

 in the air, and not unfrequently kills them. They even enter the camps, 

 and would fain eat from the hands of the men while at their meals. They 

 are easily caught in any kind of trap. My friend, the Rev. John Bach- 

 man, informed me that when residing in the State of New York, he found 

 one caught in a snare which had been set with many others for the com- 

 mon Partridge or " Quail," one of which the Jay had commenced eating 

 before he was himself caught. 



In the winter they are troublesome to the hunters, especially when the 

 ground is thickly covered with snow, and food consequently scarce, for, 

 at such a time, they never meet with a Deer or a Moose hung on a tree, 

 without mutilating it as much as in their power. In the Bay of Fundy 

 I observed, several mornings in succession, a Canada Jay watching the 

 departure of a Crow from her nest, after she had deposited an egg. When 

 the Crow flew off, the cunning Jay immediately repaired to the nest, and 

 carried away the egg. I have heard it said that the Canada Jay some- 

 times destroys the young of other birds of its species, for the purpose of 

 feeding its own with them ; but not having witnessed such an act, I can- 

 not vouch for the truth of the report, which indeed appears to me too 

 monstrous to be credited. 



I have often been delighted by the sight of their graceful movements on 

 alighting after removing from one tree to another, or while flying across a 

 road or a piece of water. They have an odd way of nodding their head, 

 and jerking their body and tail, while they emit their curiously diversified 

 notes, which at times resemble a low sort of mewing, at others the sound 

 given out by an anvil lightly struck with a hammer. They frequently 

 alight about the middle of a tree, and hop with airy grace from one branch 

 to another until they reach the very top, when they remove to another 

 tree, and thus proceed through the woods. Their flight resembles that 

 of the Blue Jay, although I do not consider, it quite so firm or protracted. 

 The Canada Jay breeds in Maine, in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, 

 Newfoundland, and Labrador. It begins so early as February or March 

 to form its nest, which is placed in the thickest part of a fir tree, near 

 the trunk, and at a height of from five to ten feet. The exterior is com- 

 posed of dry twigs, with moss and grass, and the interior, which is flat, 

 is formed of fibrous roots. The eggs, which are from four to six, are of a 

 light grey colour, faintly marked with brown. Only one brood is raised 



