I asked them a while back 'cause I wanted a job there and they said 16 and over (:
No. There are only Jay Jay's in Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa.
No, the blue jay is a common species.
No..The blue jay is still a common bird over much of its range.
well it depends if your talking about the Tornonto Blue Jays (the baseball team) or the bird blue jay but both are consumers
Corvidae is comprised of the raven, magpie, jays and crow species.
it depends. if you find an older blue jay, then no. it wont get to know you cause it is old. if you find a blue jay EGG, and it hatches, you can care for it and it will like you. so old blue jays, NO. baby blue jays, YES.
The plural of jay is jays.
there from jay jays but jay jays dont have them any more:(
yes
It's not.
Scrub jay, blue jay, Canada jay, Steller's jay.
McGuiness :]
Blue jays.
No. There are only Jay Jay's in Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa.
Jays are in the Corvid family of birds, jays, crows, and ravens.
its called jays treaty cause it was jay himself who wrote the treaty.
An American jay is any of a variety of species of jays native to the Western hemisphere.