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

Month: November 2011


2008 Kit: Cheryl Reynolds

Here’s the thing. People like you and me, we admire beavers because they’re interesting and hardworking and family oriented and quirky and peaceful and just plain cool. We like their tails and their paws and their noses and their fur. We like the graceful ‘V’ they make when they swim, the line of bubbles they blow under water, the determination with which they sometimes walk on two feet, and the way that the flourish their tail makes when they dive looks like the flirty skirts of a spanish dancer. We love to hear their uniquely wordless whine because it always speaks volumes  and we start to feel sad when its been a year since we saw a new kit or a tail slap.

But  there are other folks in the world that are not beaver-centric. (Surprising, I know.) Some of them powerful folks. Folks with a vision. Folks that see beavers as a MEANS to an END. These are people who who look at these furry engineers as a cheap way to get back the habitat they need for the one thing they care about (and it ain’t furry). For them, beavers are like that guy you dated in college so that you could go to that party where the guy you really liked was playing bass. Beavers are useful because of what they bring. They’re nature’s Santa Claus. What do I think about this idea of purposefully using beavers to remake the streams we ruined 200 years ago?

All I can say is, WELCOME TO THE FAM!

When we talked wild coho habitat on the North Oregon Coast a couple of days ago here, we talked about silvers’ need for slow, slackwater areas off the main channel or on the edges for fry and parr to feed, ride out high-flow events, conserve energy, and grow into big angry smolts before heading down to the salt.

Beavers make that habitat, and they do it better, cheaper, and a gajillion times more efficiently than humans could ever hope to. The little buggers are aggressive too, and busy. They work at night, on holidays, and in all kinds of weather. Don’t eat much. Just some ol’ wood’l do.

Thompson.Spawners.1

Ever-growing stacks of science bears this relationship out, and the numbers are pretty much just nuts. We’re talking percentages up into the 80s and 90s of coho production potential lost in areas where beavers have been eradicated, and conversely, similar numbers of gains where they’ve been restored – way better than human-engineered projects, often off-the-page better. And when you consider that North American beaver populations have gone from anywhere from 100 million or two down to a few million since we started trapping the crap out of them back in the late 1800s, it’s not a stretch to translate that into a big hit against wild salmon.

Alan Moore

What a delightful article!  Go read the whole thing which describes a  beaver project in the Necanicum Watershed where they’re  enticing beaver back by just planting some willow. With adequate food, the beavers  will stick around, making dams, pools, channels. salmonid habitat and ultimately more beavers. As I’ve said many times before, beavers are actually the trickle-down economy that works (and works and works). The project is a joint effort by the Tualatin Valley Chapter of Tu, the North Coast Land Conservancy, and the Jubitz Family Foundation. But why stop at three? Since beavers increase habitat for waterfowl, migratory and songbirds why not include Ducks Unlimitied or Audobon? Since beavers are feeding all kinds of mammals with the increased fish population why not include Fish and Game or Nature Conservancy? You see how the list of friends can expand? Climate change? Water quality? Red-legged frogs? Meadows and wildflowers?

Note that these folks are in Oregon and California needs to follow suit. Still, why limit ourselves to regional efforts? Why not let the powerful fishing lobby force the  entire pacific northwest to make these changes across three states and expand our beaver population to what it used to be, getting ourselves better creeks. healthier water and drought insurance at the same time?

But for the record, I, for one, still just think beavers are cool.


Huggin’ Bear brings history to life at Nature Center

It’s not every day you meet someone who has impressed Charlton Heston with his survival stories, had a $1,000 beaver hat custom made to help teach hunter safety and is convinced the current deer population is a result of social change.

Ahh, huggin’ bear! What a national treasure!  You obviously know exactly  what you’re doing and need no help marketing your rare services from me.  Just look at how the juxtaposition of ‘hugging’ and ‘bear’ soften you into a cuddly object of reverence? And dropping that pesky ‘g’ adds a touch of the common man (which isn’t nearly as common as it once was). I for one am relieved to learn that the nature center in Alabama has full recourse to your sizable array of skills, but tell me this.

Exactly how does a 1000 dollar hat help you teach hunter safety? I’m asking seriously. I want to know.  What kind of hat was it? Did it look like any of these?

Or maybe this?


Of course Griepenkerl’s original shows Prometheus sneaking up to steal fire from the sleeping Zeus which he then gave to mankind and was punished by the Gods for eternity for his kindness. (Odd fact: German painter Christian Griepenkerl is weirdly famous for deciding not to admit the young Adolf Hitler to art school. Considering what he grew up to do instead might that have been the worst decision ever?)  But laying aside Prometheus, the Nez-Perce indians had another very different idea of where fire came from. Let me show you what I mean.

Once, before there were any people in the world, the different animals and trees lived and moved about and talked together just like human beings. 

The pine trees had the secret of fire and guarded it jealously, so that no matter how cold it was, they alone could warm themselves.

At length an unusually cold winter came, and all the animals were in danger of freezing to death. But all their attempts to discover the pines’ secret were in vain, until Beaver at last hit upon a plan.

At a certain place on the Grande Ronde River in Idaho, the pines were about to hold a great council. They had built a large fire to warm themselves after bathing in the icy water, and sentinels were posted to prevent intruders from stealing their fire secret.

But Beaver had hidden under the bank near the fire before the sentries had taken their places, and when a live coal rolled down the bank, he seized it, hid it in his breast, and ran away as fast as he could.

The pines immediately raised a hue and cry and started after him. Whenever he was hard pressed, Beaver darted from side to side to dodge his pursuers, and when he had a good start, he kept a straight course.

The Grande Ronde River preserves the direction Beaver took in his flight, and this is why it is tortuous in some parts of its course and straight in others.

After running for a long time, the pines grew tired. So most of them halted in a body on the river banks, where they remain in great numbers to this day, forming a growth so dense that hunters can hardly get through.

A few pines kept chasing Beaver, but they finally gave out one after another, and they remain scattered at intervals along the banks of the river in the places where they stopped.

There was one cedar running in the forefront of the pines, and although he despaired of capturing Beaver, he said to the few trees who were still in the chase, “We can’t catch him,but I’ll go to the top of the hill yonder and see how far ahead he is.”

So he ran to the top of the hill and saw Beaver just diving into Big Snake River where the Grande Ronde enters it. Further pursuit was out of the question.

The cedar stood and watched Beaver dart across Big Snake River and give fire to some willows on the opposite bank, and re-cross farther on and give fire to the birches, and so on to several other kinds of trees.

Since then, all who have wanted fire have got it from these particular trees, because they have fire in them and give it up readily when their wood is rubbed together in the ancient way.

Cedar still stands alone on the top of the hill where he stopped, near the junction of the Grande Ronde and Big Snake rivers. He is very old, so old that his top is dead, but he still stands as a testament to the story’s truth.

That the chase was a very long one is shown by the fact that there are no cedars within a hundred miles up stream from him. The old people point him out to the children as they pass by.

“See,” they say, “here is old Cedar standing in the very spot where he stopped chasing Beaver.”

(Does that make this the oldest ‘chasing beaver‘ story?) (Probably not.) So beaver was rewarded for stealing fire by ruthless trapping for 400 years and now gets killed whenever possible. What happened to Prometheus? Well according to legend he was chained to a rock and punished by having a giant vulture  peck out his liver every day. The liver replenished at night so his torture would be eternal. Hmm…which one do you think got off easier?



Looks like the biggest trapping agency in the country will be making a lot of little tykes happy this Christmas season! A All Animal Control (who we know at least  stayed in business school long enough to learn the phone book rule) will be sponsoring not one but TWO gift programs for needy children this year. “Operation Christmas Child” and “Secret Santa.”

Operation Christmas Child is a program that sends millions of shoe boxes filled with small toys, school supplies, hygiene items or other items like hard candy, lollipops, mints, t-shirts, socks, ball caps and coloring books to kids around the world. Samaritan’s Purse is operated by Franklin Graham, son of Billy Graham, the renowned evangelist.

Their office is also participating in a program called Secret Santa. They are sponsoring a local 3 year old little boy through a program called Secret Santa.  “Our office is going to package a shoe box for each corporate team member and take them to a drop location in our area,” said Mark E. Dotson, CEO of A All Animal Control. “We encourage you to reach out and participate in a local community program this year and help someone that is in need.”

Because nothing celebrates the baby Jesus like critter control! If they had been in Jerusalem they could have cleaned out that stable for sure!

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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