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

Month: July 2011


For some time now its been clear our kit-yearlings are living  on their own in a kind of “Island of the Blue Dolphins” beaver limbo. Their dam attempts are clearly not guided with the help of an adult, and they appear to be learning on the job the best they can. This makes sense as I read for the first time recently that dam building doesn’t really start in earnest until a beaver’s second year. Which is now.

We actually hadn’t seen much of GQ or dad before the washout in March, but Bob’s video clearly showed Dad swimming along near the footbridge. After that we didn’t spot him again. Cheryl photographed GQ coming back with a bundle of willow one morning, but he clearly didn’t stay. The best proof we have that our kits are ‘home alone-ing it’ is the shape of their dams, which, to be kind, appear somewhat fanciful.

How could the adults just leave? I have some thoughts about that. One comes from Bob Arnebeck who told me that the only beavers he’d ever seen leave a site after a washout and NOT rebuild was when there were new kits on the way. I figured it was possible dad found a mate and brought her to better grounds, and our three chose not to follow.  I do think that our colony was destabilized significantly by the loss of mom last year. Our kits spent their first summer sleeping halftime at Dad’s house, half time with GQ. They were joint custody beavers, and the psychologist in me wants to say that much of their attachment was to a sense of place, rather than a sense of family. My theory is that’s why they came back to the lodge even when it had washed out, and didn’t follow the adults wherever they went.

As I read more of Enos Mills I began to expect that, even if Dad was gone, he wasn’t far. And we’d likely see him again. Mills describes seeing the male beavers take off for a period in the summer and explore new territories, then return in the fall when there was work to be done. He said this proved useful later when it was time for the colony to relocate, which they did in groups, and they’d know which areas had good willow and water. Honestly. There’s a stunning passage at the end of the book where  a fire completely wipes out the woods all around the 8 families living in a series of ponds, and the next morning he sees a beaver exodus. 30-40 beavers marching in search of a better life.  I’d be incredulous if he were not such a respected voice, and so consistent in describing beaver migration several times throughout the book. I can’t imagine such a thing happening here, but it comforts me to think they’d be together. I do remember that news report of the seven beavers killed crossing the road in a single morning, could that have been a migration?

Thursday morning when I saw the otters, I saw something else. A sneaky beaver appear from nowhere and slowly swim across the stream. When I saw it I half said to myself, Dad? Because his coloring was different, peach/orange/tan, and his face was so craggy and muscled. I shook my head and dismissed it as my imagination, and went on watching otters snake around the creek. When I got home and looked at the footage closely I was more convinced it was Dad because of the bumpy face but then distracted by something else – or a possible something else. There appeared to be a wound on his left flank, like a gash from something metal, a propeller or fence post or something.

Cheryl and Lory went down Thursday night and saw one looking well and I staggered down before dawn Friday morning to make sure our kits were both okay. I got a good look at both of them and was relieved that they weren’t hurt. I spent time fiddling with the footage to see the wound better, and see the face better. I am pretty sure that there is a gash, but I am even more sure it is Dad.

Dad’s ‘hair’ looks different in these pictures, but look closely at the gnarled structure of his skull and face. Even GQ’s face was sleek and adult looking, and our kit-yearlings, even though they are getting so big, still have smooth baby faces.

I’m eager to see him again and see if its really a wound, I went down again at 5 butt I saw nothing this morning, – except an air tight primary dam – oh and without a single reed.


The news just came in from north of B.C.
That coho ponds dormant since late ’93
Have been freshly scraped clean with shovels and cleavers
To make way for salmon without any beavers
The ponds are so snug, the volunteers sigh
“We are sure to attract a wave of new fry!”
Without beaver dams to muddle and can’t
The Coho will nestle and we’ll get a grant
A pool of deep water, as clear as can be…
Never mind that the beavers would do it for free.

Some stories are so ridiculous that only Dr. Seuss will do. When I read this story about volunteers busily ripping out beaver dams so there would be more water for man made coho ponds I couldn’t resist. Apparently British Columbia is under the impression that the pond built with a grant attracts more fry than the pond built by a beaver. I guess they haven’t read this or this.

We can only look forward to upcoming shows of mysterious tenacity, such as how to protect deer from undergrowth, how to protect birds from tall branches, and how to protect bears from hibernation. i can’t wait.


This morning I watched two beavers come over the dam, and then noticed what looked like a really tall beaver down stream. I couldn’t imagine how a beaver could get his head so high up out of the water but thought maybe I had just mistaken a couple ducks or something. Then this popped out of the secondary dam….

Just in case you were wondering whether our ponds have any fish left, he’s here to assure you that they do. As I watched him snake under the bridge and writhe gracefully upstream I wondered what the beavers would think of this intruder eating breakfast in the middle of their tide-soaked  dam. The rascal slipped along from bank to bank and as I watched I was very pleased to understand that the mystery of the TALL BEAVERS had been solved.

Oh and if beavers and otters aren’t inspiring enough for you, Jean sent this video which I promise will be the best thing you have watched all year. Maybe ever.




It’s official. We’ve come to July 6 and there are 30 days left until the beaver festival. It’s that blooming, buzzing time of year where I lose my mind in a gasping panic. Things don’t get done that said they’d be done, last minute changes to the program stretch the limits of my capacity to woefully apologize to the printer. Offers of help get mashed between the grinding gears of knowing what needs to be done and actually doing it. I spent two hours last night sorting out 114 bracelets into small untangled groups of ten, and checking if we have enough links for 800 charms. My kitchen table has been covered for weeks with 600 pleather beaver tails waiting to be glued together and trimmed for the children’s art project. Musical acts cancel, promises go unremembered and it is often a battle of wills whether I can bear to ask for something more times than the amnesic donor can comfortably forget it.

There is only one thing to do in the face of such sulfurous conflagration – watch this over and over while I paint my tail.


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

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