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

Month: April 2011


Yesterday Worth A Dam appeared for the fourth time at the John Muir Earth Day celebration. It was a lovely day, with beautiful spring weather and a chorus of noisy frogs rising from the rapidly flowing creek. Last year 2300 people made their way to the park, I have no idea how many showed yesterday. i only know that hundreds of people stopped by the booth, anxious for news of the beavers. Were they washed away? Are they altogether? Are the kits okay? Will they rebuild?

Answering these questions over and over again, I was reminded of something which was more surprising than it should have been. These beavers are an important milestone for Martinez, a deep and remembered achievement on the part of this community and every neighboring town who was touched by their story. They are remembered like a baptism, a surgery, a graduation, or a new birth.  The beavers were something that happened to Martinez, for good or ill, and people remember it. They remember where they were working or who told them about them or how they used to walk past the dam after lunch to check on things. Whether it was the thrill of seeing them for the first time, the somber determination of the candlelight vigil, the triumph of the November 7 meeting, the futility of the April 16th meeting, the stony inanity of the sheetpile wall or the many friends and neighbors who asked them every news cycle about what was happening. The beavers were part of the community history, of the story of Martinez. People marked dates by them (oh right I had just gotten married then,)or “Janie was at Hidden Valley”, or “Bob had just graduated”, or as one reporter put it “Oh right, my daughter is three now and I was pregnant when the story broke!”

Children recognized their artwork on the banner from previous years, and mother’s recognized their much younger children in the scrapbook that covers the first year of the beaver campaign. One woman described having seen the rescue of the blind kit who was captured before he could swim out to sea, and was startled to find the exact photo when she turned the page. She was even more surprised to see the certificate of appreciation to hero Kevin Ormstein for detaining the beaver until animal control could gently carry it to Lindsay. She was especially startled because she works with Kevin at the county and he had never mentioned it! Several children  had attended the recent field trip to the beaver dam and recounted their adventure with the fearless mouse, as well as startling beaver fact-retention. Our congressman’s aid  stopped by to confirm that we will be visiting her daughter’s classroom in May and one stalwart supporter proudly displayed her keystone charm bracelet.

If a community can feel ownership of a sports franchise or an elementary mascot, why not a family of beavers? I can’t tell you how many people had followed the story and demanded an update, correcting me with what they had read or seen on the news. I would say a third of the people who stopped at the booth wanted the lastest information on THEIR beavers and had a story to tell us about what they had seen or heard or done to help them. Another third just liked animals in general and wanted to learn about them. A sliver of bitter folk asked wistfully if the beavers were finally gone, and I had a wickedly  delightful time disabusing them of the notion. But the most important third of the day were the children, who sometimes knew nothing about beavers, but wanted to paint and learn. They wistfully clutched their pictures as if they were the most precious treasures they had ever seen and held on to the schedule for the beaver festival with Christmas morning eyes begging their parents to take them. These children insisted on staying and painting with our supremely gifted and tirelessly overworked artist, FRo,  who, as always, helped each child feel they had created a masterpiece and  gently forced parents to see their children’s work through her eyes.

Oh you can’t imagine the paintings they left with us, but you will have the chance to appreciate them up close when each one becomes a stunning personalized greeting card at the beaver festival.

People, people, people, you’re probably saying by now. What about the BEAVERS! Enough social commentary! What’s new with the currently most important residents of our town? Well, after working hard all day yesterday snapping all the photos you see here, and staggering out of bed for a work day at IBRRC, our own Cheryl Reynolds stopped in Martinez this morning to catch some beaver activity above the primary dam by the Escobar bridge. A kit was taking branches into the area by the washed out lodge and working on what appears to be a rebuild.New Lodge! New Lodge! Who now can resist getting out of bed in the morning to see that!  She says the dam looks sturdier and the almost-yearling  darted back to sleep in the bank. I’m expecting grand things.


You hypocrite!
First, take the log out of your own eye;
then you will see clearly,
so that you can remove the splinter
from your brother’s eye!
Matthew 7:5

Except in this case it was a splinter in her leg that killed Erica the beaver while she languished alone in captivity after her free life on the River Tay. The splinter got infected which caused septic shock that killed her rapidly – I read somewhere that  it usually takes about six hours, and the papers are happily reporting this as proof that Erica didn’t die of the stress from being captured, taken away from her family and kept alone in a cage.

They claimed that, if stress was found to be an issue, it would highlight the “cruel policy” of trapping beavers.  However the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS), who had been caring for the animal, revealed that Erica’s death was due to nothing more than a small splinter in her leg.

Nothing more than a splinter in her leg! A splinter in her leg??? Considering this was a BEAVER we’re talking about, I find that to be an astonishing sentence. For a beaver, who chews wood, swallows wood, builds with wood, sleeps in wood and is born in wood,  to get a splinter must be a fairly commonplace occurrence.  Daily, I assume.

How often do those splinters end in death?

What are the effects of severe deprivation and traumatic loss on the immune system of an animal as social as the beaver? I assume every biologist and reporter would want an answer to that question.  I went checking about and found this lovely article from the BBC

Social stress can trigger potentially deadly over-activity by the immune system, scientists have found. They found that stressful social interactions stimulated a dangerous inflammatory response in the mice equivalent to the human condition septic shock.

Well, well, well. That’s very interesting and makes total sense considering we humans know that a terrifying life makes us weaker. I wonder why no one mentioned this finding in discussing Erica’s splinter? It must be an oversight. Hmm. Would it be worse to think they were intentionally misleading the media? Or that they were  simply unaware of relevant research?

I’ll take my answer off the air.


Four years ago we received a last minute phone call to do a beaver display at the John Muir Historic Site’s Earth Day. We were still hot on the heels of the final beaver subcommittee meeting at county chambers where the city council ‘declined to vote’ on our plan and brought in a secret expert to stagger up and down the isle with cardboard saying  that our beavers were leaving and flow devices don’t work. Remember?

We didn’t’ have an awning or a table cloth, but we did have a partial scrapbook, a chewed beaver stump and some photos. I stopped on the way and picked up some felt pens and paper at walgreens because I thought children might enjoy drawing our beavers. It turned out to be a hugely successful activity which even the council member’s children couldn’t resist. I still treasure those drawings as a turning point in our new focus and campaign. You might call chapter 1 of our story  “Facts” but chapter 2  was definitely “Hearts & Minds”.

Well it’s Earth day again, and I’m a member of the John Muir Association board now and this year in charge of entertainment again. I invited Zara McDonald of Felidae to be our speaker  because Mt. Lions are on everyone’s mind and Tom Rusert (who invited us to speak in Sonoma) said she was the best presenter he had ever heard. Come get the straight scoop on the lion that was recently shot in Redwood city and what to do if you encounter one of your very own. Worth A Dam will be there painting watercolor beavers with children, teaching about the gift beavers give to our tired earth every day, explaining humane solutions, and answering questions about the dam washouts and the family.

Two important authors will signing their books that day, Scot Miller, who just photographed an anniversary edition of My First Summer in the Sierras and, Garrett Burke, the designer of the California Quarter.  I’ll be having dinner with them the night before to welcome them to Martinez and make sure they care about beavers. I might just have to drop a canadian nickel casually on the table, just to seed future designs…

Im told there will be mascots in Puma costumes. No one dressed as a beaver. Probably. You never know.



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!