Month: August 2009
This afternoon at 1:00 pm, Worth A Dam’s Linda Meza will be talking about the effect of beavers in the watershed with other guests, Lisa Owens-Viani and Mitch Avalon. Tune your radio to 94.1 FM KPFA in Berkeley or listen live here. I, sadly, will be laboring at the day job to support my “costly beaver habit” so listen close and tell me all about it! Archive here until August 21st.
The radio opportunity, and my interview next Saturday with Dave Egbert came from the flurry of attention to our mink. It’s funny how we can stand around spouting “Keystone Species” over and over for two years but nobody believes you until you snap some great mink photos and get a biologist to say its important! Hrmph! We knew it was important back in 2007.
Still, Joe Eaton’s new article on the mink and the habitat is a lovely read at the Berkeley Daily Planet. (We here at Worth A Dam consider it our special duty to keep Joe busy!)
The wildlife scene at the beaver pond in downtown Martinez continues to surprise observers. Last year, in addition to the beavers, muskrats, river otters, turtles, and herons, someone spotted a single mink. Now there’s an entire mink family.
Beaver advocate Heidi Perryman and photographer Cheryl Reynolds observed them on a recent July evening near the beavers’ main dam, where Escobar Street crosses Alhambra Creek. If you visit the Martinez Beavers site (www.martinezbeavers.org/wordpress), you can watch four young mink cruising around like a paddling of ducklings in Reynolds’ video. Furry ducklings with sharp little teeth. The mink appeared to be using a muskrat burrow on the side of the pond.
Um…Perryman’s video…but thanks for the plug! It’s interesting to read his discussion of the meaning of Minks in the watershed. Because they are at the top of the food chain they are an important indicator of pollution, so these 5 mean our water is looking pretty good. It’s amazing to me how little is known about minks, since they aren’t a profit making industry any more, or a profit destroying pest, no one is researching them. I wrote our friend Bob Arnebeck who spends all his time looking at wild things, and he had this to say about mink.
Minks seem to like to raise their pups close to civilization. I never see them in
the remote beaver ponds. There are four pups down at our community’s
“main dock”.
Bob is an avid observer of wildlife, and a challenger of classroom learning in favor of hours of actual watching and paying attention. You can check out his website on minks here. In the meantime, enjoy Joe’s article which is a lovely reminder of why minks matter.
Don’t forget to listen at 1:00!
Photo: Cheryl Reynolds
Yesterday Worth A Dam headed over to the John Muir Mountain Day Camp to give a presentation on our Martinez Beavers. 35 children came for a slideshow and presentation, given in the cool, thick-walled adobe where Muir’s daughter lived for many years.
There were plenty who said their parents or grandparents had taken them down to see the beavers, and plenty of awwws about the adorable baby mink photo. We answered questions, introduced the beaver chew and the skulls (Wishpoosh you were a hit!) and then headed outside to invite them to draw pictures of things that lived in the creek on the cermaic tiles.
In addition to great questions and enthusiasm there was amazing artwork, 35 6×6 amazing artworks to be exact. One of our favorites was this finely scaled fish leaping to catch a dragon fly dinner. Wouldn’t these look lovely, framed in blue tile, and laid on the cement of the Marina Vista Bridge?
Linda Meza on KPFA Friday at 1:00 pm talking beavers, minks, and civic challenges. Michelle Chan will host, and mentioned she attended Saturday’s beaver festival.
Back in the murky grip of winter, when Californians were waiting for the temperature to drop and East Coasters were trying to remember what the earth looked like under its white blanket, beaver friend Mike Callahan of Beaver Solutions in Massachusetts was hatching a plan. He wondered about making a series of DVD’s to train willing people to do sensible beaver management. His idea was to create something accessible and hands-on enough to be used by public works crews and maintenance workers across the nation.
He thought about learning to make the video himself, and asked me if I could help. I told him my video expertise ended at the three minute mark, and I had no experience (or even computer space for!) longer projects. I suggested he talk with some of the wildlife groups in his area, who might have a videographer already as part of their own marketing. Mike talked with the Humane Society and Audubon who were very excited about the project and directed him to apply for the AWI Christine Stevens Grant. Which he did, arguing convincingly that teaching cities to take care of beavers would take care of waterfowl, take care of amphibians, take care of muskrats and minks and otters and improve water quality.
His request had a familiar personal history section that I hadn’t known before, involving his and his wife’s early days as compassionate B&B owners turned volunteers who were trying to save some beavers in their area. They brought in Skip Lisle to help and Mike spent time training with him. You know of course that beavers change things: it’s what they do. Soon Mike’s compassion became a passion, then a career and the B&B was sold and the business of Beaver Solutions was born. It’s a pretty interesting story.
Anyway, back in murky January, he composed his request and he waited.
He waited a long time. Winter is an idle time for a Massachusetts beaver man, with months that he couldn’t get in the water at all, followed by months that he just wished he couldn’t. Last night, after 8 months of waiting, Mike finally got the news.
His grant was awarded! To the tune of 10,000 dollars! Since it didn’t exactly fit the requirement for the Stevens award, the money will be taken from another source, but they said it was a very worthy project and now he can move forward. Just in time for his trip to Juneau at the end of the month when he’ll be helping the mendenhall glacier beavers (remember them?) not wear out their welcome.
This is big big beaver news. If the training series was cheaply available around the country, there would be far fewer excuses for directors of city works everywhere. We are so happy for Mike, and we really couldn’t be more pleased for beavers.