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

Month: December 2009


Looks like “Friends of East Bay Owls” will descend on the Antioch Kiper development next Sunday. Turns out owls have more friends than beavers, and a host of riled defenders will show up and demand better treatment than eviction. I helped design the sign and put Scott in touch with some headwinds that will blow him in the right direction. I thought I’d share. If you’re interested in reminding the powers that be why its worth setting aside a few feet for wild things, write us and I’ll give the details and put you in touch with Scott. Several Worth A Dammers will be among the chorus. We’d love a host of children in owl costumes if you know of any.

Yours Owl-ways.


So last night I got a call from video man Moses. He’d been out in the wee hours of Christmas Eve shooting a little footage. Seems he got several beavers, some very chewed trees and a lovely sunrise. Guess what else he got footage of? Mom!

We haven’t seen Mother beaver since September, and some of us were more than a little worried she might have died. Her eye had been looking worse and worse, and we assumed her health had something to do with the absence of kits this year. Be that as it may, Moses brought over footage he had taken at 5 in the morning on Christmas that shows her happily chewing and eating willow.

The good news is that her right eye looks better. The bad news is that her left eye looks affected also. This is clearly sticking with her, although neither side looks damp or crusted like it used to do. Jeff Alvarez told us that if she had rubbed off her fur because of an irritation or condition, it would take a good while to grow back, so its hard to know if this will change.

Still, its lovely to see her again, steadily swimming, climbing, foraging and chewing. She was clearly untroubled by her condition and took it in stride. I’ll try that also.

Just read this news. Really heartbreaking. I guess you were ready, Vic. But I wasn’t.


On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the second day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the third day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Three watching women

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the fourth day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Four furry kits

Three watching women

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the fifth day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Five City Council!

Four furry kits

Three watching women

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the sixth day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Six baby ducklings

Five City Council!

Four furry kits

Three watching women

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the seventh day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Seven on committee

Six baby ducklings

Five City Council!

Four furry kits

Three watching women

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the eighth day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Eight eager muskrats

Seven on committee

Six baby ducklings

Five City Council!

Four furry kits

Three watching women

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the ninth day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Nine children laughing

Eight eager muskrats

Seven on committee

Six baby ducklings

Five City Council!

Four furry kits

Three watching women

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the tenth day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Ten news reporters

Nine children laughing

Eight eager muskrats

Seven on committee

Six baby ducklings

Five City Council!

Four furry kits

Three watching women

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the eleventh day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Eleven cameras snapping

Ten news reporters

Nine children laughing

Eight eager muskrats

Seven on committee

Six baby ducklings

Five City Council!

Four furry kits

Three watching women

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

On the twelfth day of Christmas my true love gave to me

Twelve hatching turtles

Eleven cameras snapping

Ten news reporters

Nine children laughing

Eight eager muskrats

Seven on committee

Six baby ducklings

Five City Council!

Four furry kits

Three watching women

Two adult beavers and

A Dam in Alhambra Creek

 

And, in case you get some seasonal blahs, here’s some nondenominational Very Good Cheer!


Okay. It’s the real Eve. I have cookies to cut and beavers to decorate. I will leave you with this bit of cheer which never ever fails to make me smile. Especially the words “mostly” and “you know what?”

Meanwhile, supporter GP wrote Martin Salter, the anti-beaver MP in england, (as did many of you, thanks!) and got back a copy of his official pro-salmon anti-beaver paperwork, which I sent along to the beaver-salmon research group of Brock Dolman. And Scott of JournOwl has been working hard  to save the remaining owls with a ton of new supporters organized by SFEP Lisa Owen’s Viani. She has put him in touch with Michael Graf, the environmental attorney in El Cerrito that helped us with our sheet pile tragedy, and they may be able to get something slowed down legally. Our own VP Cheryl went and walked the area with Scott yesterday and took this photo of a remaining owl awaiting foreclosure.

Photos: Cheryl Reynolds

 


Ahhh. Even when I was a child, with no responsibilities but opening presents happily and remembering to say “thankyou”, I preferred Christmas Eve to Christmas Day. Very very soon I realized that the anticipation was (for me) better than the event itself. Thinking about what I would be given or the expression my sister would make when she opened her whatever, was always better than the actual experience itself. In part because imagination is Infinite and the event is finite. (And don’t even get me started talking about the depressing void of boxing day) So Christmas Eve was at the heart of the holiday season for me.

Now as an adult, Christmas Eve is more like the event itself. Because there are dinners to prepare, guests towels to assemble and counters to keep tidy. I have officially moved the glorious anticipation day up by 24 hours: to Christmas Eve, Eve. I invite you to try this as well.

Think about it. Christmas Eve, Eve, has almost no responsibilities, and if there are things that need to get done, there aren’t yet people they need to be done for. It’s buffered by a pleasant warm sense of good things to come, and a cozy fullness of life and possibility.

Beavers, on the other hand, are definitely Christmas Morning kinda of creatures. They don’t seem burdened much with anticipation or disappointment. They live in the “now” and have an enviable enthusiasm for whatever it is they’re doing at the moment, even though they’re able to plan ahead and work on future goals. A beaver can come the next day to a job sight carrying tools he decided he needed the day before, but never once during the intervening time worry about meeting his goals. S/he makes the plan. Executes the plan. Revises the plan. Shares the plan. And eats the plan.

Happy Christmas Eve, Eve. If you need more good cheer, check out beaver friend Joe Eaton’s article today in the Daily Planet about the otters in Jewel Lake. A certain beaver pond is mentioned.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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