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

Month: August 2010


The Beautiful Banner displayed at the beaver festival was the product of over 100 children’s fabric artwork from the Flyway Fiesta and Earth Day. It was the brainchild of FROgard Butler, an artist with East Bay Artists Guild and an instructor at Diablo Valley College. The children amazed us again with their delightful drawings but it was FRO who painstakingly sewed on the ribbon borders and got the whole project ready for display.

I met FRO at First Night in 2007. I was standing beaver-watch at the Escobar Bridge and she came by to learn about the animals. She was very impressed with what she saw and took some brochures to distribute at the vets where she dropped off her pet portrait cards. FRO did pet paintings and asked if I would loan her a photograph to paint a beaver. That was the start of a beautiful friendship. FRO brought that watercolor to work on that first earth day event and presented it at the final beaver meeting in April. It now hangs in my living room and not a day goes by that I’m not grateful for that happy First Night accident.

Art Projects FRO has sponsored with the Martinez Beavers;

  • Earth Day 2008 Draw A Beaver
  • Beaver Festival 1 2008 Clay Beavers
  • Art in the Park 2008 Water color Beavers
  • Earth Day 2009 Clay Beaver Diorama
  • Beaver Festival II 2009 Ceramic Tile Beaver Art
  • Flyway Festival 2010 Fabric Beaver Drawings
  • Earth Day 2010 Fabric Beaver Drawings
  • Beaver Festival III 2010 Acrylic Creek Mural

Our beaver-friend Ann Riley sent me the July issue of “Mother Earth News” with a four page article on beavers and a nod to our friends at Beavers: Wetlands & Wildlife. It was fun to read about their activities from someone who appreciates them, but I had mixed feelings about parts of the article. My sense was that the author advocates for keeping beavers in the same way that a bud light commercial advises you to “drink responsibly”: they have long figured out that you won’t do it anyway.

My sensibilities were particularly ruffled by two parts of the article: the first was that damming was entirely ‘based on instinct’, which if it was true, why would beavers stay with their parents for 2-3 years? And why does a particular beaver’s damming behavior get better over time? More importantly, his statement that beaver populations have ‘recovered’ is true only if you use the kind of mindset that the Bush Administration did when they took bald eagles off the endangered species list. (“Well there are so many in Alaska!) It’s ‘recovered’ in the sense that they probably aren’t dying off any time soon, but it isn’t ‘restored’ to its original numbers by a long shot.

Here’s my letter to Mr. Krautwurst. I haven’t been able to find an address to post your own but you can use the form at the website if you’d like.

Mr. Krautwurst’s article on beavers is a necessary – but not sufficient – look at the impact this keystone species has on our habitat. Contrary to his statement that beaver populations ‘have recovered’ it would be more accurate to say that they have recovered a fraction of their original range. Beavers were once in “every river, brook and rill” (samuel de champlain). Krautwurst doesn’t discuss the essential role that beavers played in the geology of american soil and how the realization of that motivated federal agencies to offer some protection in the early 1900’s. He also notes that beavers build dams and chop trees based solely on instinct, which can’t possibly be true. Any animal that reaches physical maturity but remains with its parents for two to three years is obviously learning and perfecting skills. Finally he credits the beavers excellent ‘reproduction rate’ with its fictional recovery. A female beaver is in estrus 12-24 hours every year, so beavers reproduce at a slow, steady rate. Touting their proficiency only makes them more likely to be killed when their behavior interferes with humans. The beaver baffler was the only tool of choice about 20 years ago for beaver management. The new flow device technology has come a long way and can solve virtually any beaver flood-related problem. The article should have also emphasized that beaver trapping, besides removing wetlands and hurting wildlife, is a short term solution that must be paid for again and again. Installing a flow device or culvert fence is an investment that will pay for itself many times over.
Let me end by saying how DELIGHTFUL it was to sit under the trees at John Muir Mountain Day Camp and hear children quizzing each other on why the beaver was considered a keystone species and how it impacted other wildlife. Ahhhh

This morning 30 more children are eager to learn what a Keystone Species is and earn the last of our charms for a bracelet. I’m off to the John Muir Mountain Day Camp to teach about beavers and make bracelets. It is my grand fortune to be there with Frank Helling who cheerfully portrays Muir every year and talks to the kids about his life. Fortune is contagious apparently: he came down with Igor after the 2008 Earth Day event and watched a half dozen beavers with Cheryl Reynolds on hand to explain what he was seeing. He still talks about that magical night!

Since there are less of us this time to go around I thought of a new plan. I’ll do the presentation for the first “tribe”, and ask questions at the end. The lucky 6 answers will become “charm captains” (you know a beaver captain, a salmon captain, a key captain, and so on) and then they’ll go off to make sure the other 9 children ‘earn’ that particular charm. Jon will be there to link them onto a bracelet and the lucky kids will get a shiny souvenir of their day learning about beavers. Meanwhile I’ll be presenting to the second ‘tribe’ and getting new charm captains for the second wave. Repeat this three times. This way the children teach each other and the odds of being remembered go wayyyyyy up.

We had just enough for 30 leftover which means I did 95 bracelets at the festival. No wonder we felt busy! Here’s a nice ‘teaching children’ video if you haven’t seen it in a while.


Susan Kirks is the woman behind PLAN and the badger advocate at the festival. I read about her online years ago and tracked down her contact information because I thought we might possibly have something in common. She has been working much longer at her much bigger cause to create an open space wildlife corridor in Petaluma, but we still had lots to talk about. She blogs for Petaluma 360 and wrote a fantastic account of Saturday’s event. Today she gets to be a ‘guest blogger’ but since I didn’t exactly ask permission you have to click on the link above and visit her site as well. Okay?

A Great Day for Beavers

by Open.Spaces

Saturday, August 8th, was a great day for Beavers – and for people, too.  The 3rd Annual Beaver Festival was celebrated in downtown Martinez, next to Alhambra Creek.   A walk over the nearby pedestrian bridge that crosses the creek provided a superb view of the beaver dam.  At one point, a green heron came to rest on the dam.  Beavers are nocturnal, so there wasn’t an expectation of a sighting.  What was stunning was the creek, the dam crossing it, the plant life on the creek’s banks, and the amazing quiet and feeling of peace when, just several feet away a lively celebration was in full swing.  It was like stepping from one world into another and then stepping back.  The support for beaver conservation was community wide and very alive.

The Paula Lane Action Network booth was open for Badger talk.  Many people of all ages stopped by to ask, are there badgers here? –  and to learn the story of the Paula Lane Badgers in Petaluma and South Sonoma County.   Others shared their own badger experiences.  A naturalist with the Walnut Creek Open Space Foundation knew of a badger sighting on Mount Diablo several years ago.  More recently, there’s been evidence of some burrowing near Brentwood.  I remembered this kind man from last year.  We’d discussed the benefit of building branch and brush piles among open grassland areas for wildlife cover and habitat.  A woman who used to live in Indiana stopped by and shared she and her dog had come upon a baby badger, covered by leaves, when out on a walk in Indiana many years ago.  “We got out of there very quickly,” she said, knowing the mother badger was probably nearby, possibly out hunting, and would not want to find a woman and her dog near the baby badger!  A young boy stopped by and shared he’s writing a paper about badgers for his 5th grade science class.  I told him I knew a web site that would love to post his paper if he wanted to send it to PLAN.

Next door to the PLAN booth was the Painting Extravaganza.  Frogard Butler, a talented artist, created a backgound mural of the Alhambra Creek area and Beaver Habitat, with nearby local streets.  Children were invited to imagine and creat with colored paints whatever they wanted to add to the mural.   At the end of the day, I went to see the mural.  “It’s very interesting,” the teacher/artist leading the painting process mused.  “They didn’t paint any people.”  Indeed, the mural was filled with all kinds of animals and wildlife, from a mother bird feeding her young in a nest to a nest full of eggs to all kinds of raccoons, skunks and beavers.  A lone scarecrow in a grassy area was the sole human-like expression.

At Noon, children led a procession of a beautifully handpainted Beaver Banner through the festival paths.  Throughout the afternoon, musicians entertained festival goers, culturally diverse and musically joyful.

Also close to the PLAN booth were the Mount Diablo Audubon Society, where adults and families with children shared shifts and talked about the amazing bird life in Contra Costa County; the National Park Service, with a friendly and kind Ranger who knew everything about the John Muir National Historic Monument; and the Burrowing Owl Conservation Network, a grassroots group that organized to protect Burrowing Owl habitat in Antioch, becoming a resource and advocacy group for the species.

Another activity I found charming was – the charm bracelet.  Young people visited festival sites and learned about the beaver and its influence in our environment.  They visited the Friends of Alhambra Creek booth for a dragonfly charm, the Salmon Protection and Watershed Network booth for a salmon charm, the Native Bird Connections booth for the bird charm, the Lindsay Wildlife Museum display for an otter charm, and Worth a Dam’s headquarters booth for the beaver charm – and questions and answers about what they learned – and then the bracelet to link all the charms together – demonstrating the links in the ecosystem.

Heidi Perryman, Cheryl Reynolds, and everyone with Worth a Dam (www.martinezbeavers.org/wordpress) once again organized and provided, really, an incredible venue for wildlife appreciation and environmental education – with lots of fun – in support of the Martinez Beavers.  The Channel 5 evening TV news on Saturday night broadcast the day’s events and, again, elevated appreciation and awareness for Nature and the human place in it.

Isn’t that great and generous writing? Have you clicked on the link yet? Go ahead, I’ll wait. And when you come back I’ll tell you a secret. I am certain Susan became undeservedly fond of me when I told her the story of my childhood neighbor (the first female sheriff in Contra Costa County) throwing a dead stuffed badger over the fence for me to see: 3 year-old Heidi very weirdly decided that this dead fierce creature would become the treasured stuffed animal that I carried around and slept with for years. It was about 4 feet long, had very coarse fur and razor sharp claws. Ahhh. My parents knew better than to let their daughter sleep with a dead animal, but I was inconsolable without it, and my odd attachment prevailed. I am certain that it had an effect on my developing personality because I am told I can be fairly stubborn. (I say tenacious!)  Who ever performed the taxidermy did it very poorly because this particular badger was quite thin and long….I didn’t find out badgers were bunchy and short until I was 22.

Thanks Susan for the great article and the enormous advocacy you have done/are doing. I’m was so happy to see your smiling familiar face at the festival and can’t wait to see the remarkable finished project you will achieve.


We were strolling along– Alhambra Creek
We could hear the people saying–Oh my, Oh dear
Folks are coming to see Alhambra Creek
And it’s thanks to Worth a Dam that they come here

See the heron and mink, the otters too 
They have come because of beavers –that’s something new 
They have stolen our hearts 
We’ve come to view 
And it’s thanks to Worth a Dam Who saw it through

Sung to: “Moonlight Bay”  Lyrics by ‘Granny Gail‘ for whom we are Grateful.

Yesterday’s event was a rousing success by every measure: great attendance, excellent Music, remarkable children’s art, beautiful wildlife, a busy membership booth and a momentous silent auction with only one item remaining by the end of the day. Adorable children learned beaver facts and more than a couple whispering parents coached them with the wrong answers (“beavers eat fish!”). I personally made sure that everyone wearing the keystone charm bracelet knew better. Thanks to our amazing volunteers who worked tirelessly all day linking things together and thanks to our fearless displays who answered the same questions again and again.

Three highlights of a million will stay with me for a good long time: The Morris Dancers procession with the children’s banner trailing behind, The Raging Grannies touching verse about missing Mother Beaver, and Mission Gold Jazz Band playing the song I listened to over and over while the beaver battle was raging — imagining a day when the beavers were loved and protected in Alhambra Creek – like they are today.

 

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

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