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

Month: June 2009


Wednesday’s city council meeting was almost of beaver vintage. It was SRO packed full of teachers and parents and city workers. A sea of orange caution t-shirts lined the first three rows of chairs and sat there ungraciously while old ladies stood at the back. In silent pauses you could hear the sound of children playing on the porch while they waited for their parents. Patient-looking women with classroom poise passed around tupperwear containers of chocolate chip cookies.

At that first body count everyone should have known how the meeting would end. A room beyond full of people willing to share cookies is a dangerous thing. The city should have just unfolded its hands and wrote out the check right then. Superindentent Rami Muth (who inherited woes she could not have possibly imagined) stood up and gave an impassioned, level, persuasive speech for the city to unclench its purse strings and help MUSD maintain the important 20-1 teacher ratio for K-3. She spoke so well the room was silent when she left the podium. A few of us clapped like it mattered and the room burst into applause.

The first speaker was an 11 year-old boy whose mom had gotten a pink slip. He bravely took the podium and started to say how important that school had been to him. He promptly burst into tears as only an 11 year old boy can. His mom came to stand with him. He finished his comments through sobs and then took his seat.

Game. Set. Match. At that moment the city should have just handed its atm card to the crowd and said, is this enough? The meeting was over, the brittle back of “withold” had been fractured by the gentle persuasion of “give”. I knew how it was going to end. (To be honest, I may have cynically wondered how that boy felt about beavers because he would be a powerful weapon if carefully used….) Still the city insisted on protocol and the meeting wore on.

I will say our City Manager, from the very get-go, seemed to know which way the wind was blowing. Before the meeting there was a deal in the works for the school to pay back a loan through turning part of one of their playgrounds into the Corp Yard for the city, (ostensibly so the then-vacated area next to the beavers could be used to make another 4 story senior center). The City Manager began by saying that the idea wasn’t possible, because of hazardous materials, etc, and looked at the council as if he had told them this before. It reminded me of the story I heard about his hiring. When asked about handling the beaver issue in Martinez he had apparently shaken his head and said knowingly, “You are never getting rid of those beavers. Better just face it”.

So how many nails is that in the city’s coffin (coffers?) SRO, cookies, crying and City Manager. There were more. The biggest came from the city workers union representative. The orange shirts were there because they objected to the city refusing to open its reserves to pay them, but agreeing to do so for the school district. They felt that the city giving up this money meant further cutting down the road. It reminded me again of the beaver subcommittee when one night their actions of allegedly ripping out the dam was up for discussion. News of the damage had hit the papers and the director was very upset about it.  That night a similar sea of orange lined the back row to show solidarity.

On Wednesday they were a wave that couldn’t read which way the tide was turning. Instead of earning brownie points by gallantly standing up to offer their chairs to little old ladies in the back, (which would have allowed them to stand on strapping young lad display at the wall), they hunched their shoulders and ignored the entire room. Their representative got up and described how he had graduated from larger classrooms and turned out fine. With ear-splitting tone deafness he suggested that parents needed to volunteer in the classroom. (You could literally see the hair stand up on the backs of all the parents and teachers necks.) He pointed out helpfully that grades k-3 were not that important and its not like they were teaching the kids Calculus. I wanted to say sit down!  Stop helping these men! Someone hand that man a cookie so his mouth is full. You are doing your union no favors.

One of our more colorful regulars called it like it was when he got up to accuse the city of playing both ends against the middle. “These guys work hard, they deserve to be compensated.” He argued. “And these teachers have important jobs and they deserve to be protected.” His accusation was hard to question, “You guys do this all the time. You make different sides fight each other. The truth is you can do this all, and you should.”

Even the obligatory public comment that questioned why a city could spent 300,000 on BEAVERS (goodness our beavers are greedy) and not on its children, wasn’t too upsetting. It, like everything, was fairly well articulated and impassioned. The Virginia Hills dismissive man who suggested that the city money should not go to the district where only half of Martinez residents are enrolled was countered by the mayor’s own admission that for years the city has paid for crossing guards in that district and never for MUSD.

It reminded me most of the beaver meeting because the community tipping point had been reached. What I mean by that is that there are regulars at city meetings, like the colorful speaker, and the city is used to lying in front of them. Then there are semi-regulars at some city meetings, of which I have unwillingly become one, and the city would prefer not to lie very much in front of them, (although they will if sheetpile is involved). And then there are those rare meetings full of people who have never been to a meeting before, who believe in their trusting hearts that the council represents their interests. The city HATES to be caught lying in front of them. And when they show up, the outcome is always predictable.

I’m reminded of Abraham Lincoln…

You can fool some of the people all of the time and all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time.

The vote was 4-1 to award the school the loan. Chocolate chip cookies all around!


Yesterday morning was a super high tide and the water level rose past the secondary dams and easily over the first. It gushed through the muskrat passage at the main dam and filled up the lodge pond with a healthy amount of water that was lovely to see. A huge log floated or was dragged downstream into the creek and dad could be seen bringing willow branches into the old lodge, where one can only assume our elusive kits are still hiding out.

Last night Cheryl thought that passage had been officially plugged, even the muskrats had to walk around the hard way. The tunnel area was obviously a mixed blessing and they weren’t sure they wanted to give it up. It was a useful way to sneak by pesky photographers, and a handy cove for sitting and munching without prying eyes. Still, it drained away their precious water and I think they were getting the idea that water is not going to be replaced any time soon. A true approach-approach beaver conflict where the scales were finally tipped.

Hmmm…I wonder what will happen next?


So the other day I visited the nearby animal park, Safari West, in Santa Rosa. I had heard about it first from a cheerful beaver visitor who said they had spent the day there and weren’t ready to stop watching wild things so visited the beavers on their way back to their home in San Francisco. I was not disappointed. The park is animal and people-friendly, and has a glorious wild feeling, like you could go exploring for days. All the guides were knowledgeable not only about individual species, but about unique quirks about individual animals. They were easily able to answer and encourage questions. There is an amazing aviary where exotic birds were nesting and feeding their young. But the most exciting part is the trek in an old Korean War vehicle out into this fabulous mountainous terrain covered in amazing blue oak and surrounded with zebra, gazell and gunu.

After my exciting trip I thought I’d drop the owners/directors Nancy & Peter Lang, a note to mention the Martinez Beavers and the way they have helped children in the Bay Area learn about local nature.  They are deeply committed to conservation and involved in research and education. It is the kind of informal, pushy, self- introduction that I do fairly often for Worth A Dam. Usually nothing comes of it, but one never knows. So I thought I’d try.

To my delight I got a call monday from the coordinator of the “Animal Encounters” program of Safari West. This program allows up close comercial events and donates 10% of its earnings to non profits involved with teaching children about the natural world. After we talked enthusiastically about the beavers in our creek and their influence on the habitat (and the people) we confirmed that Worth A Dam would be one of those lucky non-profits. I may be asked to come present on beavers for the staff, I’ll definitely keep you posted.


Today representatives Greene, Atkins & Garry will be considering the addition of 131-80 B which will allow recreational beaver trapping in half of the state. Long time beaver friend Mike Callahan will be there to testify on the value of using flow devices to manage problematic behavior. New beaver foe Laura Hajduk, introduced by the slanted NYTimes piece last week will be there to talk about their horrific population explosion and exaggerate their heinous furry crimes. It should be the episode of “boston legal” you don’t want to miss.

Yesterday she spoke at the University of Massachusetts Wildlife Conference.

Recent changes and projected trends in management of the “overabundant”: beavers in transition from resource to pest. Jennifer E. Strules, Laura Hajduk, Robert D. Deblinger, Kiana Koenen, and Stephen DeStefano; University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

The title tells you everything you need to know about this bit of beaver slander. I can only assume the word “overabundant” is in quotation marks because they know it’s a lie. Obviously the lecture was a disappointing collection of exaggeration and distortion, of the quality that one might find from say, oh, a city council member—not from public officials charged with protecting the state’s wildlife.

Mike’s kinder, gentler (read: saner) talk is tomorrow morning. It is encouragingly titled:

The best management practices for resolving beaver – human conflicts: the use of innovative flow device technologies, scope and limits. Michael W. Callahan, Beaver Solutions.

No quotations marks necessary. Good luck Mike!




Back when artist Kat Mulkey’s SOS woodpecker picture appeared in Gary Bogue’s column about the plight of the Rossmoor birds, I dropped her a note to thank her for her work and suggest she visit the Martinez Beavers. Maybe she’d be inspired? Kat came one evening in the spring and was met by myself and beaver regular LB for the full tour.  She was treated to an excellent beaver viewing as our yearlings wrestled in the water and paddled about. I could tell her interest had been awakened but couldn’t yet tell what might come of it.

This morning I see in Gary Bogue’s website that she has been hard at work. I love the piece, fantastic noses, small eyes and especially the paddling webbed foot under the water. (This was one of the surprises she remarked on as we sat on the bank). As always Gary, thanks for your kind attention to us, and Kat thanks for letting our beavers inspire you. Hey, maybe you’d like to come to the beaver festival? Display your work and let your skills be seen? Or possibly consider donating this work for the silent auction and making some beaver fan happy for years to come?

Just askin’….

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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Ranger rick

The meeting that started it all

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