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

Month: July 2012


‘Crocodile’ terrorising German town turns out to be a beaver

Two visitors to the Bavarian city’s local lake, Klauensee, claimed to have spotted a crocodile in the water. After deploying dozens of searchers, including a dramatic night-time boat operation with more than 70 police, fire fighters and aid workers, officials in the town now believe they have spotted the missing reptile. But Klausi the crocodile, it turns out, is actually just a beaver.

The city of Schwandorf has no wikipedia entry but is a small German town near the Czech border.  What lake housed the criminal? The article doesn’t say but since the public named the mythical croc ‘klausi’ I’m assuming the sighting was in Klausensee. This means the lake with the lurking crocodile is about 2000 feet across and just under a mile long. 70 officers to patrol means one officer every 200 feet on the perimeter. And HOW in god’s name would a crocodile survive in Bavaria exactly? They are cold blooded you know, and the average winter temperature hovers right around freezing. I suppose its possible someone just released his pet croc in the lake and its managing fine in the summer heat, but 70 police? Here’s a handy comparison sheet for next time, because I’m sure even in Schwandorf there are more important things to do, and btw thanks for the morning ROTFLOL.

And because nothing in life is simple, here’s a the flipside of the headline for today. Sigh,  something like ‘Yes, Klausi there is a Virginia?’

Worst.  Beaver. Story. EVER.

DC Breaking Local News Weather Sports FOX 5 WTTG


Why flooding means we must bring the beaver back to the South West

A wildlife expert says Britain should bring back the beaver to stop the growing menace of flooded homes and businesses.  Ecologist Derek Gow says the water-loving creatures would gnaw through trees and build dams, holding back the floods when rivers get swollen by heavy rain.

Britain is lagging behind other European countries who have already re-introduced the beaver and studies in places like Belgium and Germany have proved they can help alleviate flooding, he says.

Remember our old friend Derek Gow from Devon Cornwall? He has beavers on his estate and really values their contribution, got some press because one ‘escaped’ a while ago and was ‘found in a slurry pit. Only it turned out that the ‘found beaver’ was not HIS beaver but was some escapee/refugee/I’m-sick-of-waiting-for-England-to-bring-back-beavers-so-the-beavers-are-just-going-to-do-it-themselves kinda beaver!

I wrote Derek after that first lovely article where he extolled beaver benefits and he kindly wrote back.  Turns out he and Paul Ramsay of Scotland know each other and he is very interested in reeducating the population about beavers!

Hi Heidi – thanks for your mail. Things are changing here but sometimes it takes a lifetime to turn round ignorance. Free beavers on the Tay and in Knapdale now and some breeding in England. Ironic that the country which did so much to destroy the species has been so slow to re-understand them.

BW – Derek

Derek Gow Consultancy Ltd
Upcott Grange Farm
Broadwoodwidge, Lifton, Devon

So Derek and his team have been using some basic ‘plug and pond’ techniques (beavers without beavers) to slow water in the study area, leaky dams, retained soil and the like. And how do you suppose all that is working? Of course its been excellent! But it takes a lot of time and effort. Farmers are busy men with only so much effort to spare. If ONLY there were some kind of creature that would move in and do all that work for free. Gosh.

“There is nothing about this which is novel – they’ve been re-introduced all over Europe, so we have blueprints on how we go about living with and managing this animal. The only thing that is new is that we here in England are last to do it.

“The real issues are likely to be pretty minor. They are going to block a few culverts, yes, but not stuff that’s unmanageable, and there are ways of resolving these things. You can put beaver guards in place over the culverts.

“You’d look at negatives and cost them, and then the positives. Do they have a significant influence on water retention? If you have a village in the catchment, do they prevent flooding? Do they help hold more water in upper catchment? Do their dams catch silt, nitrates, phosphates?

“If the answer is yes – and the European experience is that they do all these things successfully – you will have significant benefits.”

Derek! We LOVE you! You are changing hearts and minds and obviously know what you’re talking about! Maybe Cornwall needs a beaver festival. Did I mention that my grandfather was from St. Austell?

“For years farmers and others have been doing their best to drain land better, but that water has to go somewhere. If you imagine one million cubic metres of water going through a town quickly in the peak of flood, that’s much higher than you’d have had before the drainage was improved. What we are trying to do is spread that peak by slowing the flow.”

Derek says that natural dams built by beavers across the rivers can do the “slowing-water-down” job effectively and it costs nothing.

Maybe if Derek is spouting beaver benefits in Cornwall and Paul is reciting them in Scotland and Duncan is shouting them in Norway and Glynnis is enumerating them in Canada, California will eventually come plugging along? A girl can only hope.

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Beaver Festival Alert: This weekend I assembled the good work by our friends at Folkmanis and Wildbryde to make basket with 50 of these. Honestly there should be some kind of criminal action taken against anything this cute.





She and others worked REALLY hard to get rid of trapping and save some beavers in Cornwall Ontario, which sits right above New York State. They protested, talked to the media, and generally made an obstacle of themselves and guess what happened? Always remember what Gandhi said

First they ignore you
Then they laugh at you
Then they fight with you
Then you win.

Posted by Mike Callahan on the Beaver Management Forum. Photos courtesy of Rebecca Sorrell.

Great Beaver News from Ontario!

I returned home today from a fabulous trip north of the border to Cornwall, Ontario. It was a fantastic week full of fun, good conversations, and lots of hot, hard and rewarding work installing flow devices.

As you may recall from recent BMF posts, The Association for the Protection of Fur-Bearing Animals based in Vancouver, offered the financial support and expertise to install the first flow devices in the city of Cornwall, Ontario. They also kindly paid me to assist them with the flow device installations.

I’d like to give big kudos to Adrian Nelson of FBD. He really impressed me with his ability to work with local officials, obtain all the right materials and tools, design the proper flow device for each of four sites, and teach the local volunteers how to build and install the devices. He was so good that my expertise was barely needed. I agreed completely with his plan for all four sites.

Adrian is quickly becoming North America’s west coast flow device expert!

A major highlight of my trip to Ontario was meeting the inspirational leader of the campaign to save Cornwall’s beavers from continued trapping. Her name is Rebecca Sorrell and she just joined our Beaver Management Forum. Welcome Rebecca! Never doubt that one determined and passionate person can be the catalyst for positive change. She has rallied many other good people in Cornwall and together they are making the city change its trap first policy.

Rebecca and many in her large group of passionate volunteers were actively involved with the flow device installations and are taking responsibility for monitoring and maintaining them to ensure long-term success. In addition, they plan on installing more flow devices themselves if the city has beaver conflicts elsewhere! They are a dedicated bunch, led by a special and inspirational person, and with our Forum’s support and assistance I am sure they will succeed!

Donna, Gary and Kate, our Ottawa-Carleton Wildlife Center beaver friends made the trip to Cornwall and were also very helpful and a delight to spend time with. Hopefully our work in Cornwall will inspire / embarrass the politicians in the Capital city of Ottawa to finally embrace flow devices. Good luck to these dedicated beaver friends as they continue their struggle in their nation’s Capital.

There was some good local media coverage in Cornwall which is so important to educate the public. Hopefully Rebecca can post the links and maybe a few pictures of the installs here for everyone to see.

Finally, it was a pleasure and honor to work with all these good folks as we all continue to spread the word about the importance of beavers and the effectiveness of flow devices.

A hearty congratulations to Rebecca and friends, Adrian and Furbearer Defenders, and Mike who drove across several states to get there! I hope your hard work reminds everyone that people can make a difference, that even tricky problems have humane solutions, and that beavers are worth a dam or two!

Speaking of dams, apparently our beavers are so highly regarded that this morning even an angel came to visit  them.

Angel Visits Beaver Dam - Great Egret by Heidi Perryman



You changed American music forevermore. And  we can’t possibly think about the giant dust storms that shaped your stories, without thinking about beavers and what happens when a nation removes them.


Napa Valley and River, 1885, by Manuel Valencia. Collection of the Hearst Gallery, Saint Mary's College of California. Gift of James J. Coyle and William T. Martinelli

Check out Robin Grosinger’s lovely new piece on the history of the Napa River in this issue of Bay Nature and online here. Its an except from the recently published book Napa Valley Historical Ecology Atlas: Exploring a Hidden Landscape of Transformation and Resilience. The magazine describes it thusly:

The following is adapted from the Napa River Historical Ecology Atlas, a new book by Robin Grossinger, director of the Historical Ecology Program at the San Francisco Estuary Institute. The book is the result of 10 years of study of the Napa Valley, combining exhaustive research into historical documents and exploration of the landscape today. It is perhaps the most in-depth look at the historical character and transformation of any river in our region.

High praise indeed and well deserved. Love the part where it mentions the skimpy riparian tree borders and how wide they SHOULD be. Our historian friend Rick Lanman swapped some collaborative emails with Robin as we worked  towards our historic beaver prevalence article. A dramatic graft that produced some very nice fruit! Go read the full article and think about buying Robin’s excellent book.

Beavers have recently been found in the Napa River for the first time in years–in the vicinity of Rutherford and downstream of Oak Knoll. But were they there historically? Early naturalists speculated not. And John Work, one of the earliest trappers to come through the North Bay, wrote of the Napa River in 1833: “The little river where we are encamped at appears very well adapted for beaver yet there appears to be none in it.” But six weeks later, the expedition sent a side party to the river, where they had earlier “found a few beaver.” Work also reported beavers a few miles away in the Sonoma Creek watershed; other sources also support the historical presence of beaver on the river. Trapping likely removed most beavers from the watershed by the 1840s. Before then, beaver dams would have increased the extent and persistence of wetlands along the river even beyond the amount documented in the 1850s and 1860s. In other regions, the importance of beaver ponds to salmon populations and overall stream function has been increasingly recognized, and their return can potentially help speed river recovery.

Nice! The article also reprints this excellent painting from Joseph Grinnell’s seminalthere are no beaver above 1000 feet AND California beavers don’t leave footprints or build lodges” chapter.  It doesn’t say who painted it, and I don’t think it was him or Hilda, but I’d like to know because it’s lovely.

Speaking of lovely, there was a generous mudding show this morning at the secondary dam.Here’s a sampling of it. It’s so convenient when your building materials are so located so close to your project and even better when they’re so affordable! But if they also happen to be delicious, well, that’s just a bonus!

 

Moses had footage today of two young River Otters that visited the dams yesterday around 6:30. They chowed down some very glorious fish meals and then were chased off by a big beaver coming from above the primary to hasten their exit. Keep your eyes peeled because they may show up again.

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