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

Month: January 2010


Yesterday we went driving through the high country, way up highway 88 where it snakes along the Carson River up past Woodfords. There is a not-so-secret beaver habitat out on Washoe Tribal lands out there. Years of coppice cutting have produced a THICKET of willow and scruffy trees. We hadn’t visited the habitat since summer and wanted to see what it looked like with a little bit of snow. (I was dying to see beaver footprints and a tail scrape in snow.)

One never knows where the spirit of beaver adventure may lead. We turned off 88 onto Carson River Road which follows the west fork of the river into tribal lands. At the first curve, 15 miles and a peak away we saw beaver dams. We pulled over to investigate. Lovely interlaced and curving work, framed by chewed cottonwood stumps and trees that stood despite huge fresh bites in them. A definitely active colony. Maybe the children or grandparents of the beavers I knew about.

We drove on a little more, now craning our necks at every bend in the river. Four miles along we spotted another series of dams. Curving and strong, breaking the water into deeper pools. In fact, the beavers had made such a nice pool, someone had installed their pump house at it. A corrigated building covered the pump itself, which pulled water from the reliable beaver pond. A very useful flow device.

We stopped a few more times, but there were no more beavers until we reached the known colony. It had sustained a little water damage, and my very favorite curving dam had been washed out. But there were three new ones down stream and a number of fresh chews. I scoured the light snow for sign of a tail drag but I saw only the footprints of birds. That is high desert area, beautiifully bleak and not much snow. The air smells of wild sage and pinyon pine grows in scruffy patches.

With very little sleuthing we had found three colonies in a 15 mile radius. What lay beyond we could only imagine. It was a solid reminder that we need to get to work next on our beaver identification map. Maybe you have a suggestion about the easiest way to add this to the website: a tool for identifying a colony and marking its coordinates so that people from Los Gatos to Eureka could see the beaver colony near them. There has to be any easy way to do it. If you have some ideas write and let me know.

In the meantime, keep your eyes open. You never know what you might find.


The National Park Service and Redwood Creek Nursery continue to help Redwood Creek reestablish its natural meandering course with occasional deep pools by strategically placing logs and woody debris in the creek;  restoring historic flood plains by removing levees; and actively encouraging the amount and diversity of streamside vegetation.

Salmons Struggle for Survival: Muir Woods National Monument. NPS US Dept of the Interior.

Your federal tax dollars at work proudly doing what beavers could do for free. Our Wikipedia friend has been finding a lot of these kinds of projects, where rangers are rebuilding dams to help salmon, usually after they rip them out to harm beavers. I suppose it keeps our goverment employees busy, but to be honest, when I talk to the rangers out at the John Muir Site they think they’re plenty busy already.

Why couldn’t we have beavers at Redwood Creek in Muir Woods? They aren’t going to eat the sequoias. They would add interest to the millions of tourists there every year, and they would help those special coho by making little dams along the creek that eeked out flow in the summer months, and slowed the current in the winter months.

The National Park System just released a massive report on whats wrong with that creek in particular, and why they didn’t see any salmon returning last season. Guess what it doesn’t mention? I guess NPS didn’t get the memo from NOAA? I guess they’re too busy to have a conversation with Michael Pollock of Northwest Fisheries. I guess they aren’t ready to overcome years of prejudice with just a few reams of hard scientific data?

Come into the light, NPS. It’s a beaver renaissance out there, and they have many, many uses.


The Antioch burrowing owls are at the end of their rope. The developer has responded to the public pressure and media presence by ramping up the bulldozers. The owls I saw at the protest Sunday were already homeless. Within days more will be. The 1995 comparison study by LA Trulio1 noted that displaced owls did best when relocation sites were less than 75 meters from the destroyed burrow. Also if there were artificial burrows for them to move into right away. Destroying owl burrows with no appropriate place for them to go is a death sentence.

These actions are allowed by an Environmental Impact report obtained during the Clinton Era. An environmental attorney has been consulted who says that this is not nearly adequate, and the action could be stopped since the owls are so rare.

Beaver supporters who remember our day in court for the failed CEQA challenge know that environmental attorneys cost money, even when they lose. Times are tight for everyone, but can you help a little? The action only needs to be slowed for 25 more days, because the owls can’t legally be disturbed after February 1st. If you have even a small amount that can be donated to help avert this crisis, contact  Lisa Owens Viani (lowensvi@sbcglobal.net) and let her know. Don’t let the Antioch make this mistake and more families go homeless.

1 Trulio, Lynne A. ( 1995) Passive Relocation: A Method to Preserve Burrowing Owls on Disturbed Sites. Journal of Field Ornithology, 66(1):99-106.


Yesterday I was so thrilled with the new logo I dangled it appealingly in front of Jean Matuska who helps with the web design and said, wow wouldn’t this look great on the header, gosh too bad no one knows how to put it there. Mean while I was dangling the logo appealingly in front of the designer Kiriko Moth and saying, gosh wouldn’t this look great on a hunter green table cloth, too bad its the wrong color.

Joyfully, Kiriko offered to print the opposite of the design, and send that to our tablecloth order. And Jean figured out how to tuck the logo into the photo strip. Once we saw how easy it was to change the header I asked very politely, maybe someday, when she was burdened with free time, we could choose the photos together? Because our original web designer, Michael Cronnin, just picked those photos without our input. And Jean, who was inspired to great heights by the lovely logo and a charming owl protest on sunday, said, pick the photos and I’ll do it for you.

Give a hoot!

It was her 10th anniversary, so when they got back from a celebratory dinner, she made the switch! I wished her a very happy anniversary and assured her it was excellent luck to fix a beaver website on such an occasion. (Since beavers mate for life.)

I love the new photo strip, all originals from Cheryl Reynolds, more than I can say. But I thought it would be good to pause and remember the old one fondly. It saw the beavers from a time of great danger to a time of civic protection. From a time when we the site had 80 readers a day, to a time when it had 800 readers a day. It was a gift from a friend who donated generously with his time and made the painstaking transition from martinezbeavers.com to martinezbeavers.org/wordpress. It featured the dam and the flow device because that is what everyone needed to focus on. Now it features our heroes. The strip is dead. Long live the strip.


Yesterday was several days of wonder layered into one. Our artist, Kiriko Moth, released the final edits to the Worth A Dam Logo, and we couldn’t be more happy with it. Now its off to the printers to have it placed on a banner and display tablecloth, and maybe some teeshirts! Hopefully I can figure out how to switch it for that alarming orange rodent in the address bar that Michael installed years ago. In the mean time, I offer you a closeup for your viewing pleasure.

One thing I love about it is that even if you are ignorant of the concept of a “Keystone species” it is clear that the beaver is the key to the river, and the key itself is a kind of dam, which couldn’t be better. Any local henna artists might think about adding this to your stencils and joining us for the beaver festival this year!

The second grand layer of news was that when I came home from work there was a DVD from Don Bernier of the trailer for the Concrete Jungle. 12 minutes of introduction to the series and three of them about the Martinez Beavers. Mayor Schroder was there, sounding deceptively reasonable, Al Turnbaugh was there to be the villian of the piece, and Skip Lisle was clearly the hero. At one point there was a very intelligent female voice describing researching the statistics of rainfall and dam washouts and I thought, hey, she’s stealing my data! Who is that theif! And then saw that it was me! Ack!

All in all it looks like a unbelievably useful program and I know it will get bought up quickly. And Martinez, to be honest, was the hub of the story. With massive crowd shots, and the sweetest images of kits paddling past Starbucks. I can’t wait to see the whole thing.

Such a rich day. You would think that would be enough for any woman. But the highlight was an email from Cheryl Reynolds who snapped a photo of Mom beaver in the am. She was eating the untouched tree from yesterday’s IBB. Ahhh, it never fails to cheer me to see her. Enjoy.

Photo: Cheryl Reynolds 1-5-2010

 

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

DONATE

Beaver Alphabet Book

TREE PROTECTION

BAY AREA PODCAST

Our story told around the county

Beaver Interactive: Click to view

LASSIE INVENTS BDA

URBAN BEAVERS

LASSIE AND BEAVERS

Ten Years

The Beaver Cheat Sheet

Restoration

RANGER RICK

Ranger rick

The meeting that started it all

Past Reports

Story By Year

close

Share the beaver gospel!