Because the beaver isn't just an animal; it's an ecosystem!

Month: March 2009


Water. Water. Water. Last night I got out of my car and stepped onto the soggy street and waded upon the soggy curb over the river that is Castro Street in the rain, and I thought, SOMEday we’re going to wash away and the beavers are going to have to start a nonprofit to take care of US.

Castro street is a well known tributary for flood waters. Often times people misunderstand that the creek spills over its bank as far upstream as shell or the adult school and, having once broken the bonds of custom and habit, decides on a whim to use Castro as a more direct route to the sea.  The beavers came and built their dam at the location where the water is trying to get back into the creek after having second thoughts. They have nothing to do with flooding in Martinez.

It is not Castor but Castro that brings the great flood, and even then it is just a vehicle for transgressions caused much higher up. I will say that every year someone comes to pump out our street drains, unsuccessfully. And every year the hapless contender gives up in disgust saying, “Huh, that thing’s collapsed” and drives away. Perhaps he makes a note of it somewhere in a large bureaucratic pile of papers, or perhaps he just keeps his counsel (so we keep our council) but no one ever fixes it, because its an infrastructure problem larger than Martinez is willing to roll up its pants legs and deal with.

All this to say that Castro Street this morning was the recipient of the loveliest heavenly concession, a huge iridescent rainbow ending in the hills where the Osprey sleeps in the summer. Maybe its a sign, like God gave to Noah, that there will be no more flooding. Or maybe its just a real nice thank you card.

(The Epic of Gilgamesh, Tablet Eleven)

Then Ishtar arrived. She lifted up the necklace of great jewels that her father, Anu, had created to please her and said, “Heavenly gods, as surely as this jewelled necklace hangs upon my neck, I will never forget these days of the great flood.


Every now and then in my beaver forays I encounter the character of the stalwart outdoorsman who has used Alhambra Creek for fishing, or for catching crawdads, or to launch his Kayak, and feels fairly familiar with the landscape. Some of these greet our keystone species discussion with suspicion.

“I know this creek. There are no (fill in the blank: beaver, otter, muskrat, mink) on this creek”

This always surprises me because it seems to suggest creeks have the static populations of prisons with familiar residents that you know by name like a predictable 70’s sitcom. It ignores the fact that creeks are really water highways, and animals use them to pass from one destination to another. Beavers alone have been known to go some 30 miles to find good habitat for dispersal, with females going farther distances to locate better feeding. Who would expect to know everything that passes through a corridor?

I wonder if the same man would stand on the freeway and say,

“I know 680. There are no porsche on 680.”

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=tzKTwJEjpac]


Weekends are usually slow traffic here at the Worth A Dam Cafe. We usually get about 150 hits on saturday, less than half of our weekday traffic. Its possible that’s because on the weekend people have time to go look at beavers for themselves and don’t need to read my writing about them. It’s possible that beaver fans have such rich and exciting lives there’s no time to look at the webpage. Or its possible that beavers are really only interesting enough to read about at work, where the competition is less stiff and distracting.

(Which isn’t a complaint, because sometimes I appreciate the break.) But yesterday we had more like 600 visits with 2800 page views. Think about that for a minute. That’s a lot of readers on a rainy Saturday. Why the sudden bump? Were the children of California all suddenly writing reports on beavers at the same time? Is the economy depressing people so badly that only beavers can cheer them up? Or is it news of our Mom sighting that got passed from person to person and merited a visit?

I’m going to guess the latter. Mom’s got star power. She’s recognizable and central to the action. Heck, she even has a beauty mark.

Whatever the reason let me take this opportunity to greet new readers, and welcome back old ones. As we’re heading into Spring there’s going to be a lot more beaver activity to see and participate in, and the beavers need your support more than ever. In addition to the Worth A Dam Sierra Club presentation, we’ll be working with the city engineer, the ESA students and an interested eagle-scout candidate to work on tree planting. Next Month there’s Earth Day to look forward to, and after that the environmental fair, the creek seeker’s express and our beaver seminar.Your interest and enthusiasm continue to make all the difference.

Still, since there’s high traffic at the moment, I’m going to re-post my sheetpile comments to the council, because Martinez foot the bill for this, and its now a prominent feature of the beavers lives and our lives when we go watch them. The photos researched for this presentation inspired a UC Professor to contact me about using it to teach a course in Historic Photographs, but only 213 people from Martinez have seen it. Even though it was discussed in the LA Times, the Gazette never kept its promise to write about it. None of our fair-weather beaver media friends came to do a story on it, and there was never a sense of shock or outrage that the city spent vast sums of money on a project that improved the life of a single property owner.

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=rQefxDQemaA]

The moral of the story is that your city lied about the need for this sheetpile, and rumor is now that the restaurant Bertola’s will be closing because the rent was raised unreasonably high to force them out. Steadier minds than mine have suspected that there were plans all along for that property.

The Sheetpile secured them.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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