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

Month: May 2011


Citizens deciding how to spend $1.5M in Dixie National Forest

Mark Havnes: Utah News

Cedar City • Beavers could soon be frolicking in the waterways of Dixie National Forest in southwestern Utah.  Beaver transplants were just one project approved by a citizens’ groupcharged with deciding how to use $1.5 million given by the U.S. Department of Agriculture to counties for projects benefiting national forests.

I know it’s the first thing I’d spend money on! Bring back the beavers who can bring back the water who can bring back the fish and the birds and the wildlife that people go to a National Park to enjoy. Apparently a citizen group gets the authority to point these moneys in the needed direction. Part of it goes to relocating beavers and part of it goes to teaching the public how to build flow devices.

Also approved was more than $9,800 for the environmental group Grand Canyon Trust to develop public workshops on how to build flow-control devices so farmers, ranchers and others who depend on irrigation can coexist with the beavers.

With a beaver-ear to the ground I knew that something big was up when last week I heard from two well-known but as-yet-undisclosed beaver defenders that they had been approached about the contract. Moving beavers and managing beavers. Regular readers can probably fill in the names for themselves for the time being, but we’re talking good news for the beavers in Utah, and probably Arizona and Nevada too.

Beavers aren’t the only keystone species to do well in this contract

Another $20,800 will be used to relocate colonies of the threatened Utah prairie dog from Iron County to forest land and $29,500 to fight the threat of plague in existing colonies. Prairie dogs are a perpetual problem for land developers in the area.

Obviously the unwritten maestro in this symphony is the tireless Mary O’Brien of the Grand Canyon Land Trust.  She has clearly made beaver pathways all over Utah and the state is lucky to have her. Rumor is she’s trekking to California this August to learn how Martinez throws a beaver festival, so maybe you can thank her yourself.



Sacramento Daily Union: June 1884

 



And before anyone asks, no, you can’t have ours!

2010 beaver Kit - Cheryl Reynolds

Do you know this delightful book? A series of increasingly bossy animals appear in this hardy child’s life and she works pluckily to remove them one after the other.

What do you do with a kangaroo
who hops through your window and
jumps on you bed and says,
“I never sleep on wrinkled sheets,
so change them now and make them smooth,
and fluff up the pillows if you please?

The heroine isn’t at all discouraged.
You throw him out that’s what you do!
“Get away from my bed, you Kangaroo”.

This fairly amusing encounter is followed by a series of other increasingly unrealistic demands – an opossum hanging on her towel rack who requires a new toothbrush, a llama who wants her pants tailored, and finally a menacing bengal tiger who sits on her bicycle and orders she push him all the way to the circus before being eaten. She blithely dispatches every single one of these unreasonable requests with a no non-sense pragmatism and goes about her business doing what she always does.

Give that tiger a push, if that’s what he wants. You push him right off, and that’s all there is to it.

Until bedtime.

What do you do if it’s late at night but all snuggled up
where you always sleep is a Camel, a Moose, a Llama, an
Opossum, a Tiger, a Raccoon and a Kangaroo?

“We’re very sorry if you want to sleep but as you can see
there is no more room. So make some warm milk and bring
us a glass and find some more blankets- it’s chilly in here and
remember the chocolate chip cookies.”

Of course the heroine continues to solve the problems as she always did, which is try to haul the intruding animals away and get her own bed back – to claim her territory and return to her normal routine. She tries like the Martinez City Council tried and like New Jersey tried, and like Kings Beach tried and like Latvia tried to get rid of the unwelcome animals, stop the disruption, prevent further damage and return things back to normal. There are a series of adorable illustrations by Mercer Mayer showing again and again how gallantly she persists in an effort that is rapidly becoming futile.

But in the end, it’s late, she needs to sleep, the odds are clearly against her, and she suddenly realizes the rules that she once played by have changed.

What do you do if you can’t throw them out?
You let them stay.

Cue adorable illustration of plucky little girl snuggled comfortably with a camel, a tiger, a kangaroo, a moose, a raccoon and an opossum. Aww. This story is offered by way of an introduction to the remarkable update from Latvia that was sent by our famed foreign correspondent, Alex Hiller. Remember beavers had taken over the canals and the city council decided to have a contest to see who could best [fail] to solve the problem and decide what to do with them? Alex traveled to the region and had lunch with the environmental minister to talk about wire wrapping trees and flow devices.

Yesterday he sent this:

In case you can’t make out the translated headline, it reads

“ENCOUNTER BEAVERS IN RIGA!!!”

The city council received a wide range of proposals – hunting them, scaring away with vuvuzela sounds, setting up 24h patrols, or even domesticating them. Finally the officials decided to put fencing around the trees and to feed the animals.

Alex in Worth A Dam t-shirt in Riga

From all of us a at bossy kangaroo-opossum-raccoon-moose-llama-camel-tiger-BEAVER central –  thank you, Alex. Very nice work.


So a couple months ago I was avidly reading “In Beaver World” by Enos Mills who was called the “John Muir of the Rockies”.

Beaver works are of economical and educational value besides adding a charm to the wilds. The beaver is a persistent practicer of conservation and should not perish from the hills and mountains of our land. Altogether, the beaver has so many interesting ways, is so useful, skillful, practical, and picturesque that his life and his deeds deserve a larger place in literature and in our hearts.

Enos Mills

I was was told by Robert Hanna, (Muir descendant and fellow board member) that the pair met in San Francisco at the beach and became friends with common interests. Robert directed me to some correspondence archived at University of the Pacific where I learned that Mills asked for an invite to Martinez in 1907 and Muir responded with a ‘please come’ in October of that year. My fancy was struck with the idea of the author of arguably the most important beaver book yet in circulation coming to Martinez, which would one day become the location of some pretty famous beavers.

There was no record at the Muir house of his visit. No one from UOP or the Sierra Club could tell me if it happened. The helpful rangers and interpretive guides couldn’t say whether the visit occurred or not. I eventually figured the trip would have been a bigger deal to Mills than Muir, so went looking at his site for clues. I had very enthusiastic guides from the Colorado Rockies national park and the Mills cabin looking through original documents and biographies. I learned that the copies of Muir’s letters were among the items found in Mills top desk drawer when he died, so they were clearly precious. Maybe it was too much to make the visit come true? Apparently Mills was a little hard on himself, and might not have been able to accept an offer that was so exactly what he wanted. I could understand that.

Then yesterdays fluke email turned me on to the California Digital Newspaper Collection and I spent yesterday ravaging history and not even getting dusty. I found articles from the 1800’s  about beavers in the Stanislaus, Merced, and Tuolumne rivers. I found articles encouraging the adoption of kits as pets, or using dam building as a weather indicator. I found articles about beavers at Bodega Bay and Santa Barbara.

And then I found this:

It’s from the San Francisco Call newspaper in March 1908 when Enos Mills was a guest speaker at the California Club, and it clearly says Mills will be a guest of John Muir on his visit. Which means Enos Mills came to Martinez when my house was ten years old. I imagine he took the train and went from the old station to the Muir house by carriage, riding over the creek which is home to our beavers and my home on his way. Golly.


Every now and then an unexpected treasure appears in my mail box. This one may just reset the bar. It’s from an insurance agent and amateur historian who just happened to be born in Martinez and send me an article he found in the Placerville Herald.  It describes the behavior of beavers building unusually early in the season, suggesting that this particular winter might be a doozy. Why is this important? Because the article is written in 1853, about 75 years before beaver were “introduced”  in the Sierras and Placerville is about 2200 feel elevation.

Talk about a kid in a candy shop. Check out this site if you have some time to kill. I know what I’ll be doing this weekend…

Our own FROgard Butler will have a one woman show tomorrow at the Walnut Creek Library. Stop by and see what she does with her time when she’s not busy making tails and singing the beaver song. There are a 100 nonprofits in the Bay Area that wish they could have FRO’s friendship and creative force, I see their eyes glisten wistfully when they stroll by our booth at Earth day or the Flyway Festival. They all want her. But they can’t have her. Beavers got their first.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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