Birds

How to Prevent Blue Jays from Using the Bird Feeders

By knowing how to get rid of blue jays, you can free up feeders for your tiny songbirds. Giving blue jays their own bird feeder is one solution.

Advice for Dealing with Blue Jays

Blue jays are attractive and easily identifiable, but they are also notorious for making a scene at bird feeders. They are quite intelligent, making it difficult to fool them with sophisticated jay-proof feeders. Giving blue jays a place to live and a feeder of their own is the greatest way to get rid of them. Put sunflower seeds in a large hopper feeder or serve peanuts in a feeder.

Blue Jays bird

“Blue jays can completely empty a peanut feeder in less than an hour, which is why I refer to them as “beautiful bully birds.” To restrict feeding to smaller birds like chickadees, nuthatches, and downy woodpeckers, I use a caged peanut feeder. According to Deanna Frautschi of Bloomington, Illinois, “the jays have their own cage-free peanut feeder.

Feeding nyjer thistle seed to blue jays is another way to get rid of them. Blue jays and other aggressive birds often avoid this seed, but finches adore it.

The Blue Jays: Ally or Enemy?

The colourful blue birds that occasionally raise a commotion are discussed by readers.

I like leaving out peanuts for them even if they may be a bit boisterous. And my favourite colour is blue! South Dakota’s Viborg and Karen Larsen

Foe! They attack and eat the bird seed from every feeder. North Carolina’s Fairview, Terri Heacock
Although though blue jays don’t get along with other animals, it’s entertaining to watch them pick up peanuts that are still in their shells and lay them back down again as if they are weighing up which one has the greatest payload. Michigan native Jeff Vriezema, Wyoming

My feeders are frequented by starlings, grackles, blue jays, and the occasional magpie. They also make water stops. I placed many feeders filled with various types of seed around the property rather than deterring them. Lethbridge, Alberta native Ken Orich.
I enjoy listening to blue jays’ annoying cry. Albany, Oregon native Jannetta Tibbs

Unquestionably pals. The jays wait for our blinds to open every morning. They are aware that our deck will soon be filled with their delight of peanuts and sunflower seeds. Ontario’s Niagara Falls native Daphne Johnson

Despite our best efforts, it seems that any bird may be aggressive under certain conditions. My mourning doves are the tray feeder bullies. Even a titmouse has been witnessed chasing Carolina wrens away from the mealworms. Pennsylvania’s West Chester resident Boni Trombetta.