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

Month: October 2011


Lightening at the coast today left me with just one option to keep me busy….


Seems the scandal of telling an artist what NOT to paint has garnered attention beyond our narrow shores. Not since the scuffle  in Bemidji has any beaver painting got this much attention. You remember that story right? The artwork was said to look suspiciously like female genitalia and it was removed. The artist protested that it was praying hands and eventually got some friends to help restore it.

Well Martinez didn’t have the same restorative outcome, but it gathered some national attention none-the-less. Take this article from the St. Petersburg Times in  Tampa Bay Florida for example,

Artistic impression: City: Mural doesn’t need dam beaver

Artist Mario Alfaro was commissioned to paint a mural celebrating the town of Martinez, Calif. It was to include pastoral scenes, native sons John Muir and Joe DiMaggio, bayscapes and other things relevant to the area. Alfaro included a beaver in his homage, because the city has a few of those that have made themselves known in somewhat expensive ways… Alfaro complied with removing the rodent, but painted over his signature while he was at it. “I feel they do not respect me,” he said. “It was really a very small beaver.”

Or this UPI (located in Washington DC)

Odd News Artist ordered to paint over mural beaver

Martinez officials said they had artist Mario Alfaro paint over the beaver because the animal, while beloved by city residents, does not belong on the downtown mural alongside images of Martinez natives including John Muir and Joe DiMaggio, the San Francisco Chronicle reported Friday.

Or the The SOP (student operated press)

Outrage: City Officials Force Artist To Paint Over Beaver In A Mural

(Which originally ran a picture of a nutria, but kindly switched for one of Cheryl’s when I contacted them about the mistake.)

A true artist doesn`t think in a linear fashion, and he doesn`t see randomness as an aberration, but as a constant in life. In Afaro`s artistic vision including a beaver alongside images representing the city of Martinez makes perfect sense.

Most of the residents of Martinez loved the beaver, and it`s a damn shame that the visionary was forced to paint over the beloved animal, because a few philistines complained.In a world teeming with rats, snakes, and politicians, we need more, not less beavers.

Or my personal favorite…from the Eric Milikin’s blog at the Detroit Free Press

San Francisco Chronicle says: “Everything was looking great in the mural … except for one thing: the beaver. …’I feel they do not respect me,’ said artist and Martinez resident Mario Alfaro …’Every day, people ask me, Where is the beaver? So I want to please the people and I put in a beaver. It was really a very small beaver. But the city did not want it.'”

And then the best part….

Eric says: Without the beaver, that mural won’t be worth a dam.

Thanks Eric. I couldn’t have said it better myself!


Star News May 1974

Did you get that? “Nothing Else can live in that habitat except beavers and cottonmouths,”  I think we should call this the ‘ignorance lament’ and set it to fiddle music. Of course it is the 70’s so the hero makes a valiant effort to convince the baby booming  animal lovers that he ‘s one of them by using a word like “Habitat”.  Ahhh the beaver wastelands. All those ducks chased away and the fish impounded and separated from their families like prisoners in concentration camps. Not to mention the hacked stumps of trees where starving birds flap one wing weakly before dropping the rest of their feathers onto a cottonmouth, who I suppose must eat be a cannibal or eat beavers since nothing else lives there.


Get it? I guess lever and beaver rhyme in Haywood County. Catchy slogan. An they even have 8000 worth of conibear traps they will loan you, plus you get a 10 dollar tail bounty! What a vacation! Bring the kids! Well keep an eye on them around all those cottonmouths, but still….it’s fun for the whole family!

The article of course finds time to say that the beavers are breeding like rabbits and that they have girdled all the trees. I guess that means that the rabbits in tennessee only breed once a year and stay with their parents for two years. That’s quite a difference, and useful to know.

Never mind that countless research, over the last 50 years has shown that from the smallest microbes to the reptiles to the birds to the mammals to the salmonids beaver ponds are one of the most biological diverse places on the PLANET, rich with life – from the pond surface of the pond floor to the last inch of water to above the waterline to the air space 40 feet over head, beaver ponds make space for living things, and surprisingly, not just cottonmouths.

Maybe the state  hasn’t changed much in 40 years.



Mike Callahan, president of Beaver Solutions of Southampton, said he was on the road much of the time during the two stormschecking out sites where beaver flow devices had been installed.

“I was a little nervous, because in several cases flow devices were completely under water, but all of them were working. And in those cases the roads made out much better,” he said, explaining that fencing placed in front of culverts snagged beaver debris, and kept the culverts open and flowing, Mr. Callahan said.

“Where there were problems, were those culverts with grates right up against the opening that had become blocked by sticks and mud leaving the increased water flow no place to go except up and over the roads,” he said.



Beaver dam activity is seen off East Brookfield Road in North Brookfield, near the East Brookfield line. (T&G Staff/JIM COLLINS)



Apparently TS Irene damaged roads and culverta all around the state, and even though Massachusetts has “onerous” (read humane) trapping rules the state of emergency declared by the governor means all bets are off and folks are scrambling to kill as many beaver as possible before its lifted.

Luckily the areas serviced by beaver friend Mike Callahan aren’t as badly hit. That’s a perk. And the culverts covered with a metal grate are filled with debris, imagine that!

Mr. Coletta said that in those situations where flooding caused by beavers poses an immediate hazard, the priority is resolving the threat by whatever means necessary, and “dealing with the paperwork later.”

Kill’em first and ask questions later. Gosh you mean that TERRIBLE  law that prevents the state from drowning beavers and cutting off the feet of coyotes allows for emergency exceptions? Don’t tell Massachusetts Committee For Responsible Wildlife Management, it would ruin their whole schitck.

Hmm…reading further in the article I am reminded that one of my favorite bloggers is famous for saying that “Every politician is going to break your heart” meaning that whether you adore Reagan or Kennedy at some crucial point in their political career they are going to make SOME decision that betrays what you hold most dear and make you feel bereft. It’s just the way politics works, and like all heartbreaks they hurt and have the potential to make you bitter or retaliatory. That blogger notes that its good to keep in mind that in the long run you’re better off having stuff you really respect about any leader and realizing they aren’t a savior.

I guess the same can be said for beaver experts.

Mr. Callahan said his wife is a licensed trapper, but most situations can be resolved without harm to either beaver or human by finding the right balance with flow-control devices.

Sigh. Who knew beavers were going to teach me so much about life?

And one upbeat note to take with you into your Monday. Apparently the muralist Mario was seen repainting his signature this week. I’m going to imagine that after reading Friday’s scathing article in the chronicle our city manager told our Director of Public Works to take him out for a beer and soothe his feathers so that he signed the damn thing and Martinez got out of the spotlight for a moment. Apparently the peace offering did the trick, because this appeared yesterday,

Um, look closely at the “O” and think about that story of Michael Angelo painting the pompous face of  the Master of Ceremony in the underworld with Donkey Ears. Go Beavers!


He who laughs last…


Upton looks to clear culvert clogged by debris, beavers

Water began collecting around the intersection of Southboro and Westboro roads after Tropical Storm Irene passed through in late August. The culvert, which is under the intersection, became backed up with debris after the storm. “Prior to (Tropical Storm Irene) we had the area cleaned out,” Conservation Commission member Marcella Stasa said. “But all the water rushed into the culvert and brought debris.” Beavers contributed to the problem by building on top of the sticks and leaves that collected in the culvert, Stasa said.

Okay. So the beavers in Upton capitalized on TS Irene and knew a good thing when they saw it. They finished plugging up those pesky little culverts and made a swimming hole out of an intersection. Now the health department’s been called so that an exception can be made to the live trapping rule  and they’ve given their full consent of course. Along with this little jewel

Al Holman, the Board of Health’s chairman, said beavers have been a problem before. “We’ve trapped them before, but they keep coming back. It’s an ongoing problem,” Holman said.

Hmmm someone give that man a cigar! Bingo! You keep trying to solve the problem with the wrong tool and it keeps not being solved! Amazing how that works. But what’s the right tool?


Well, sure there are some bizarrely skilled folks that can use this tool in New York or Vermont, but we’re local people. What could possibly help us in all the way out here in Upton Massachusetts?

Alright,  Upton to Southampton 70 miles. So what? What’s in Southampton that can fix our culverts? We need this problem solved yesterday and all these beavers won’t kill themselves you know.

Oh.

Look, lots of folks have an excuse for not doing this right. They don’t know any better, there’s no one nearby who can help, the problem is rare and unfixable. But you, Upton, YOU have options. You could do this ONCE and do it RIGHT and save your taxpayers and drivers seasonal inconvenience for years to come. Okay, I’ve said my piece. Except… There was just one part of the article that rankled me….let’s see if I can find it.

Beavers contributed to the problem by building on top of the sticks and leaves that collected in the culvert, Stasa said.

“The poor things are just doing what they do,” she said.

That’s it! Something about that lament sounds familiar. Why is that? Hmm….Let me think…

“I weep for you,” the Walrus said:
“I deeply sympathize.”
With sobs and tears he sorted out
Those of the largest size,
Holding his pocket-handkerchief
Before his streaming eyes.

Ohhh right, that’s where I’ve seen that particular brand of noncompassion before.

Do the right thing, Upton. It will save you money and time. I wrote the paper and the major players and now the ball’s in your court.

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

October 2011
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31  

Story By Year

close

Share the beaver gospel!