Depending on what part of North America you live in, some blue jays may migrate but most do not.
how do blue jays glide
Blue jays and crows, being Corvids, do not migrate in winter. Robins, however, do migrate south, but just those birds from Virginia northwards. Robins that make their permanent home from North Carolina south, do not migrate. In winter, the population of robins explodes in these southern states as these northern birds arrive to join their southern cousins.
a baby blue jays are called chick
I'm guessing a flock, but that is more general, you could use that describing any species of birds that fly together. i don't know if there is somthing more specific.
Blue jays do not migrate south for the winter like some bird species. They tend to stay in their breeding range year-round, which includes most of North America. They rely on food sources like acorns and other seeds to survive the winter months.
A group of blue jays is called a band or party
Blue Jays can fly, or travel, up to 43.66 miles per hour.
They migrate in flocks but are solitary nesters.
They fly
1 mile
Some blue jays do migrate, but most are sedentary. They will roam in small flocks after the nesting season.
scrub jays look like a pale blue. similar to a blue jay.
Blue jays migrate along the Great Lakes and Atlantic coasts of North America. Although they are residents across the United States, some do migrate south for the winter, but not necessarily every year.
One of Blue Jays adaptations are they have wings to fly in the sky. Another adaptation, is blur jays are blue, so they can camouflages in the sky so the animals that eat them, won't see the the blue jay.
They are both birds and they both fly
Blue Jays rarely migrate, but if they migrate they leave when the weather gets to cold for them.
how do blue jays glide