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

Month: March 2010


Today 99 children’s tiles will become a permanent memorial to the beavers in Alhambra Creek. I cherish every single one of our young (and not-so-young young!) artists’ contributions along with the help of our generous donors that made this possible.  The Gazette asked me today if there would be some kind of ribbon cutting or ceremony, but I told them no, just an open invitation for people to come down and see them for themselves. Wednesday, with the measuring and taping, you could really see how the project is going to look. Art to draw attention to the creek and its famous residents, beavers to draw attention to the deserving artists. It’s a perfect combination.

I won’t get all misty-eyed about the miles we’ve travelled to get to this place, or the challenges and bitter sheetpile hardships we have endured. I won’t mention the kits that didn’t survive this year, or the long hours of worry as we watched for missing faces. I won’t talk about all the exaggerations, the lies, the accusations or the mean-spirited panic beaver supporters have faced. I’ll just think about a certain November evening 27 months ago when everything changed.

Thank you Martinez, for giving our beavers the best possible welcome and thank you beavers, for teaching a city how to listen.


 

 

Dimitry Doronkin: Contractor: Double Quality Remodeling (925) 708-1587

Tile-Bridge work begins today, barring a weird sudden rain storm like we saw last night. I couldn’t be happier to see the treasures of last summer become the pavings of tomorrow. I’ve heard from at least two papers that they’ll be by to photograph. Taping, measuring and framing today for the five panels, laying tomorrow. Stop by and say hi, look for your child’s tile, or just send a mental good luck.

The website was terrifyingly disabled last night when the host site did an upgrade. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen anything more frightening than the error message. The only word I understood was “missing”.  It’s back where it belongs, but we’re short 700 viewers! Come back! Come back! All is forgiven! Once again, I must say that Bluehost has the very best tech support in the known universe.  Thanks guys! Whew.


Beaver friend GTK wrote recently that the entire popular science archives are now available online. Surprisingly, there are several entries about beaver on Mars. Here’s a 1930’s favorite by Thomas Elway:

Check out the illustration in the center of the beaver-mouse-pig at the helm of some kind of fiendish beaver spacecraft. I haven’t yet stopped laughing at that. Thank you so much GTK for the best beaver image ever. The article is a little more thoughtful.

Read that last line again please. ‘evidence not accompanied by signs of intelligence’, ergo, it must be a beaver. Because certainly beaver don’t leave signs of intelligence like dams or lodges or canals that might be visible. They are too busy flying their spacecraft and plotting world domination.

Ahh given the myriad of misunderstandings beavers have been subject to, this seems like par for the course. Beavers eat fish? Okay. Beavers cause Giardia? Okay. Beavers flood cities? Okay. Beavers live on Mars? Why the hell not?

 


Approaching Carson Pass from the Nevada side there is a breath-taking shudder of daunting mountains decorated by a clear meandering stream, a few behemoth gnarled sierra juniper point the way as you climb and several snaking lines of aspens demand your attention. On your left, just before you reach the pass, is Red Lake, an Alpine fishing treasure at 8200 feet. Highway 88 is the secret way to Tahoe and the last feed-line to close at the peak of ski season. It follows a path originally carved by  John Charles Fremont in 1844. He was a topographical engineer and a lieutenant in the Army Corp of Engineers. He hired Kit Carson as a guide to find a way through the impassable mountains to meet up with the Buena Ventura River (the old name for the Sacramento) that supposedly flowed to the sea. He is considered the first white man to cross Alpine county.

Sometimes it is the familiar that reveals the unknown. This weekend I was bumming around the Sierras, looking for (among other things) rumors of beaver above 1000 feet prior to 1940. I picked up a lovely book by June Wood Somerville about the history of the road that became 88, including carson pass, kirkwood, silver lake and beyond. June had clearly immersed himself in every possible history of the area, and gathered them together in a friendly unique  book telling stories from the perspective of the road. Here’s what got my attention:

“It was winter and the Washo were hunting golden beaver, martin and snowshoe rabbits…One of their destinations was a frozen stream at the south shore of Red lake. there was always a beaver dam. It was a maze of cut aspen sticks and brush packed tightly with mud. It rose a foot above the icy water. Stumps stood nearby almost covered in snow. In the late summer and fall, the animals chewed at the trees until they fell, pushed them into the lake and floated them towards their dam sites. Beavers were only hunted in winter when their pelts were in-the-prime.”

June Wood Somerville: Legend of a Road

Beavers at 8200 feet in the 1800’s!!!!!!!!!!!! Of course prior to Fremont, the Washo Indians roamed the area, and made use of the land. Washo trapping beaver is a game over for beaver being native to Tahoe and the sierras. (Hear that Kings Beach?) I spent some time with the Amador County library and found an account of a father who trapped beaver as a boy in 1905 sutter creek. Also that the currency of the mountains were beaver pelts. A fellow beaver-storian is contacting the author today to pinpoint original sources. These photos were taken a few years back on one of my many October explorations of the area. Now it is almost a custom to drive through and wish we could bring some aspen back for our beavers. Enjoy the fall colors and marvel with me that the place I canoed and cross country skied a hundred times may turn out to hold the answers to our beaver historic prevalence dilemmas.

Update:

Conversation with June reveals the author “imagined” Washo trapping beaver there, no references for their historic presence. Sigh. The search continues….


This appeared in the Gazette after the closing ceremonies. Don’t tell me Martinez hasn’t learned a LOT about beaver mangement! I sent it to Skip Lisle and he was very appreciative. Just wish we could get one of those big inflatable beavers for the festival. How great would that look in the air over the creek?

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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