We visited Xunantunich, a Mayan ruin in Belize, with our guide, Rene, on March 18, 2026. We had just started walking uphill toward the ruin when we heard the first brown jays making a racket in the tall trees behind us. Rene identified them and I got completely distracted, wanting to see them and get a good photo as the brown jay was a lifer for me. They were very active and vocal and I struggled to get photos. We continued uphill, entered into the ruins and eventually climbed up the tallest, El Castillo. From the top of El Castillo a whole flock of brown jays flew back and forth, from tree to tree and I took lots of photos, hoping some would turn out. Toward the end of our visit, a single brown jay landed in a tree above me and I was able to get some decent photos while it was quite close to me.
I've loaded all of my photos. It is chocolate brown above with a dark hood, whitish underparts and white tips to the tail feathers. Immature birds have yellow eye-rings and varying amounts of yellow on the bill and legs, all of which become dark in an adult. It is common on the Caribbean slope and rare and local on the Pacific slope. "Very loud and raucous."
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| Illustration from Birds of the World. |
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| Range from Birds of the World. |


































