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

Month: August 2012


Ian Timothy models birthday shirt

When I first connected with Ian he was 13. I wrote him excitedly after seeing the first “Beaver Creek episode’. Back then we were still deeply embedded in the battle to save our beavers and I was toying with the idea of animating the struggle or dubbing the city council voices into an episode.  Do you remember that first one? It seems like such a long time ago, now. It was retro-copyrighted in 2010 but I’m sure it was earlier when I first saw it because it was before his science film entry which was 2008.

I enjoyed so many things about this effort, the humor, the water, the gentle pacing. I couldn’t even imagine the hours and days and months it took him to put together. Obviously he was a talent to keep an eye on, but I supposed beavers were just an accident, a cartoon vehicle that might as easily have been meerkats or groundhogs.

It was watching this next entry though that I realized Ian had been following our website and really taking an interest in beavers as other than clay action heroes. I was very happy to learn that it won first prize in the Virtual Challenge of the Science Museum.

There were lots of wonderful episodes that followed about 6 painstaking months apart, but the episode that really touched me and stands out in my mind was episode 6, in which Twig’s dad breaks his tail and he is called to go home to help out for a while. Our own dam and lodge had just washed out, and our mom beaver had died a few months earlier,  leaving our orphans with a lot of work to do. I was wishing our beavers could send a note to twigs (or GQ) to ask for help and easily buy supplies at ‘home treepo’. I loved seeing the kits in this episode (complete with waterwings) and the yearling, but when they were relaxing over a family dinner I saw something amazing (@ 6:27).

Did you see that that? Mom’s tail at the dinner table has the same marking as OUR mom beaver. I honestly had been working so hard to get through the festival after her death and talk to the media and explain to everyone what was going on, that I just burst into tears when I saw that. Ian hadn’t even said anything, just added it in very quietly and watched if I’d notice. After I was done being sad I was very, very grateful.

Last year he was entered in several film festivals and came to california for the Wild and Scenic event in 2011. Of course he had to stop by Martinez with his lovely parents on his way to Nevada City just to see where our beavers live and meet the Worth A Dam family. I wrote at the time how very strange it seemed to meet strangers from 3000 miles away and have it feel like reconnecting with old friends.

Recently Ian went on to save the beavers in draught park and waged a very cordial battle that got international attention. Oregon beaver friend Leonard Houston connected him with Virginia beaver friend Stephanie Boyles from the Humane Society and got her involved on the issue and she came out to convince the city of solutions. That story now has an outcome that everyone is happy with and Ian just reported on seeing the summers new kits for the first time.

So now he’s 18, and no longer the wonderboy child-wiz who dazzled us all with his prowess and patience, but a talented young man facing a world of possibilities. He’s in his senior year and turning down offers right and left while maintaining a steady course for great things. We could not be prouder and we feel blessed that our paths crossed in a beaver pond. Ian you truly have shown us that there really is always an adventure up on beaver creek!

Oh and there’s one more place Ian had to visit in California. Can you guess what that was?

 

Remember this name

Because this website doesn’t want to be accused (after yesterday’s historical-nerd post) of being too dry and scholarly, I thought it was high time to draw attention to Sarah Summerville’s very interesting column in the Beaver Defender Newsletter this month.  Seems she  was wrestling with the sexual pun of beaver, and recalling that she had actually had a conversation about it once with the famous Hope Buyukmihci of ‘beaver sprite‘ fame.

My my my! People from New Jersey are so ladylike aren’t they! Around here we’ve been much more direct about the merkin analogy in one form or another. Well thanks for the column Sarah, which also has a drop dead gorgeous account of her meeting her  new kits and touching noses with them. You can receive your very own newsletter by signing up here.


But while we’re on the topic can someone please explain why the other ‘beaver ladies’ collect funds for writing a newsletter 4 times a year and this beaver-lady writes a column about beavers 365 days a year for free? Being that we’re heading towards the 2000 post it seems a good time to ask?


Would you believe this idyllic image is from Los Angeles? What it used to look like before cars and smog and business lunches and photographers. This is a painting of the Tongva tribe who lived for thousands of years on the sea shore and mountains of San Gabriel. They hunted and fished and collected acorns and told stories and got married and worshiped a complex deity of six gods. And then some neighbors moved in.

The San Gabriel Mission we know today was erected in 1771 under fathers Cambon & Somera. It was originally slated for another location, flooded out and found its way to its present address after some false starts. It is the beginning of what is now called Los Angeles. Of course an undertaking so massive required massive labor and crops and food and workers. Plus more workers to replace all the ones that contracted diseases and died in a steady unending wave. Fortunately there was a good supply of those near by.

They called them ‘Gabrieleño’.

Which is kind of like America describing its slaves by saying they hailed from a tribe called “We-like-to-work-for-white-people” – (which we certainly might have if we thought of it). There are horrific stories about the Gabrieleno people starving and dying and killing their own infants rather than have them sentenced to a life of slavery, but this is a beaver web site so we will push past those gory details. We won’t mention the mysterious unearthing a few years back when they were installing an Arco station and found 50 violently killed bodies including women and children from 200 years ago that no one could explain.

Lets talk instead about the Blackskill Mountains where the Tongva would retreat from the heat and gather acorns to use for grinding bread. It also happens to be the sight of one of the most violent battles between the natives and the fur trappers who came to steal their you-know-whats. This battle (substitute ‘massacre’) took place in 1831 and was described to the narrator by someone who was there. We have to wonder if the ‘horse-eating-allegation’ might actually be a transparent justification, because the odds of it being true seem pretty slim. As in why court trouble when your life makes sure trouble finds you anyway?

“The story of the battle, the bloodiest in the history of the Santa Ana Mountains, was told seventy years ago by William Wolfskill to J. E. Pleasants, and was repeated to us by Mr. Pleasants. The Indians were very fond of horseflesh. Ranchos were lacking in means of defense in the days when the missions were breaking up and Indians from the mountains and desert used to have no trouble in stealing herds of horses from the Spaniards. A party of trappers came across from New Mexico in 1831. Their long rifles and evident daring offered to the troubled dons a solution to their horse-stealing difficulties. Americans were not any too welcome in the Mexican pueblo of Los Angeles, and it was with a desire to please the Spaniards [Mexicans] in this foreign land a long way from the United States that the American trappers agreed to run down the Indian horsethieves.

The trail of the stolen band of horses was followed across the Santa Ana River, eastward through what is now Villa Park and up the Santiago Canyon to the mouth of Canyon de los Indios… Here, the trail turned into mountain fastnesses, into the unknown mountains, covered heavily with brush. With every turn a favorable spot for ambush, the frontiersmen made their way carefully. The trail took the men up a steep mountainside, and, after two or three hours of climbing there was laid out before them a little valley with grassy slopes and hillsides [today called Hidden Ranch], upon which horses were quietly grazing. Smoke was coming from fires in the age-old campground of the Indians at the lower end of the valley. The Indians were feasting on juicy horseflesh. Perhaps it was the crack of a long rifle, the staggering of a mortally wounded Indian that gave the natives their first warning of the presence of an enemy. Among the oaks and boulders an unequal battle was fought. There were no better marksmen on earth than these trappers. They had killed buffalo. They had fought the Comanche and Apache. They were a hardy, fearless lot, else they would not have made their way across the hundreds of miles of unknown mountain and desert that laid between New Mexico and California. The Indians were armed with a few old Spanish blunderbuss muskets and with bows and arrows.

The battle was soon over. Leaving their dead behind them, the Indians who escaped the bullets of the trappers scrambled down the side of the gorge and disappeared in the oaks and brush. Of those who had begun the fight, a few got away. The stolen horses were quickly rounded up. Some of them were animals stolen months before. The herd was driven down the trail to the Santiago and a day or two later, the horses were delivered to their owners. In the battle, not one of the frontiersmen was wounded.^

[1930, Shadows of Old Saddleback, T. E. Stephenson, 105-06]

Hmm, okay let’s review our who’s who. Wolfskill who funded the expedition from Taos to Los Angelos ended up buying a lot of land and experimenting with agriculture. He’s the one that introduced the Valencia orange and came up with the bright idea of selling citrus to gold miners and whose fortune became the eventual name of Orange County. Are you with me? Orange money comes from beaver money. On his team was the famed Jebediah Smith, Kit Carson and George Yount. If Yount sounds vaguelly familiar it should bring to mind YOUNTVILLE in the wine country because Yount is considered one of the first vintners of the Napa valley. As in wine money also comes from beaver money.

Everything starts with beavers.

Heck, even the gold rush starts with beavers. John Marshall (who worked for Sutter)  is credited with finding the first gold in Coloma and Sutter made his money from the trade of beaver through Sutter’s fort in what is now Sacramento before that. There are accounts saying that Jebediah Smith found gold while trapping beavers in the Molumne before that but he was really only interested in fur. Everyone was looking for the beaver bounty, and they were looking in Los Angeles, and Monterey and Point Reyes, and Mendocino and Eureka – all the coast rivers where Tappe and Grinnell said they couldn’t be.

So I thought, lets look up the poor harassed Tongva and see if they had any dealing with beavers, or made clothes out of beavers, or maybe had a word for beavers. William McCawley is credited for the seminal account of their existence in  “The Gabrielino Indians of Los Angeles” first published in 1952. I was able to buy a used copy and venture through. Look at that, an appendix at the back lists the scattered remnants of their lost vocabulary:


Ta daa! We can assume if they had a word for beaver it means they had a reason to talk about beaver, and that means there were beaver in Los Angeles. Period. In fact, there was even an actual beaver skull found in Sespe Creek that Tappe described as an ‘anomaly’ but that’s a subject for another day. Beaver were everywhere in California before we killed them. Just like they were everywhere in New Mexico and Colorado and Oklahoma and  New York. They were shaping American soil and American waterways that we depend on to this day. Here endeth the lesson.

And because you have been very good historians, we will finish with a beautiful photo of our new kit Cheryl took last night. Enjoy!



Have you seen my tail? Photo - Cheryl Reynolds




Courtesy photo) A young beaver feeds after being released near a stream on the Dixie National Forest in May. The Garfield County Commission is telling state biologists not to plant the animals there as part of the state's beaver recovery plan.


Southern Utah officials nix beaver transplants

Garfield County questions motives of program, tells state to take rodents elsewhere.

Beavers may be good for the land and water, but one southern Utah county is saying “thanks but no thanks” to the state’s offer of web-footed transplants.

Garfield County, stretching from Panguitch past Boulder and including the lush streams on Boulder Mountain and the Aquarius Plateau, is historic al beaver country and therefore a target area for the state’s beaver recovery plan. Environmentalists had high hopes for naturally restoring wetlands there, but this month the Garfield County Commission told state biologists to take their rodents elsewhere.

Wow, the Salt Lake Tribune is doing an excellent job on the ‘slow bleed’ of this story. First we had two gentle op-eds on the topic and now we have a fantastic hard cover of the issue from Brandon Loomis, who isn’t afraid to go into detail about the fact that they are saying ‘no’ to beavers because they are environmentalist-phobic.

It’s not that they dislike beavers, commissioners say. They’re just suspicious of the motives.

“We’re not against the beaver,” Commission Chairman Clare Ramsay said, “but we’ve been down that road before on a lot of different issues over the years. We know that it might become a tool for the environmental community to use against cattle.”

Thanks for clearing that up for us Clare. “I’m not worried about beavers, its people we can’t trust!” Hey, could that be the next bumper-sticker for Utah?  Hmm,  there might be copy right issues though, it reminds me a little bit of this

I don’t know why a county would choose to broadcast its paranoia in the press so vociferously, but they certainly did a number on themselves with this decision. The article even reviews the financial benefit of beavers put together in the economic report commissioned by the Grand Canyon Trust. And just in case the reader still wasn’t sure who the ‘white hats’ are in the article it ends with this flourish

State biologists will honor the county’s request but seek to reopen talks later in hopes of gaining permission to stock beavers in some high-elevation streams, where they can’t damage irrigation canals or other structures, said Bruce Bonebrake, southern Utah regional supervisor for the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources.

“We’d very much like to transplant them there,” Bonebrake said. “They’re great riparian managers. You really can’t get a species that does better management as far as wildlife habitat and sediment control.”

I would say the press is playing for the beaver team and you can set a timer to see how long the commissioners are able to hold out against them. It’s obvious which side has done its homework in this debate. Congratulations! Even the comments to the article are mostly pro-beaver. Take this one for example from an ex-trapper Jim Bridger:

I did more than my share to exterminate beavers in these here parts. Now I repent! I’ve come to see that what I did was wrong. I won’t trap another beaver ever again, or a mink, bear, bobcat, coyote or wolf. And I will help return beavers to their historic homes. Now if an old curmudgeon like me can learn something new and change his ideas and his ways, why can’t those darned cow boys? Maybe I’ll take to trapping and relocating them to Antarctica.

Good work Mary O’Brien!

Reformed trappers interested in relocation! Fatted calf time! But no hamburgers for the commissioners unless they admit that they are scared of the wrong things and agree to come back to the table.


Beavers source of pride as well as concern for Plzeň region

Plzen, West Bohemia, Aug 26 (CTK) – The rising population of strictly protected beavers, the highest in the Czech Republic, is a source of pride but also concern for the Czech westernmost Plzen region, in view of the damage they cause to local field and forest owners, it ensued from a recent debate of experts.

Jiri Vlcek, from the regional office’s environmental department, said he hopes that the region will keep its impressive strong beaver population.

“Nevertheless, their high number is problematic in agricultural areas, where we permit beaver dams to be removed. By no means has the removal of beaver lodges or even shooting of beavers been permitted. I don’t rule out selective shooting [of beavers] in the future, however,” Vlcek said.

Yes, we reintroduced beavers to our country a few years back but we didn’t think they’d cause any PROBLEMS! We thought we were reintroducing the helpy beavers! Not the floody-dammy-blocky beavers! Now we might have to shoot some of them because lord knows we can’t actually SOLVE problems in Prague. I mean, its not like we can look at the internet or pick up a book or drive a few hours south to attend the international beaver symposium next month and learn how to solve these pesky problems from the experts.

Skip Lisle & Alex Hiller at the International Beaver Symposium in Lituania

“Fields, gardens, trees get inundated. Beavers also like to block water canals crossing beneath railway tracks and roads. In these cases we have to react immediately, because people’s safety is endangered,” Jan Kroupar, head of the regional office’s environmental department, said.

Beavers have also damaged buildings, and even paralysed a few water treatment plants’ operation, he said. The Regional Office permits the removal of beaver dams on special request. It also offers financial compensation to owners for the damage caused by beavers.  “More and more owners have applied for compensation for the damage beavers caused by inundating or cutting trees,” Kroupar said. The compensation sums paid out in the Plzen region are the highest in the Czech Republic, said Vlcek.

Well. There it is!


No evil fishermen last night and lots of people came down to catch a glimpse of our hero in action. He came from upstream again, and mom emerged from there as well. A kingfisher was busy from his perch under the bridge and Moses was experimenting with a new pole to lower his camera down to water level.

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