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

Month: May 2013



2008 kits - Cheryl Reynolds


There was a town
(There was a town)
A little town
(A little town)
The prettiest little town
(The prettiest little town)
That you ever did see
(That you ever did see)
Where the beavers swam all around all around
And the beavers swam all around

And in that town,
(And in that town)
There was a creek
(There was a creek)
The prettiest little creek
(The prettiest little creek)
That you ever did see
(That you ever did see)
Well the creek in the town
And the beavers swam all around all around
And the beavers swam all around


Early Dam in Alhambra Creek - Heidi Perryman


And in that creek

(And in that creek)
They built a dam
(They built a dam)
The prettiest little dam
(The prettiest little dam)
That you ever did see
(That you ever did see)
Well the dam, in the creek
And the creek in the town
And the beavers swam all around all around
And the beavers swam all around

And by that dam
(And by that dam)
There was a pond
(There was a pond)
The prettiest little pond
(The prettiest little pond)
That you ever did see
That you ever did see
Well the pond by the dam
And the dam in the creek
And the creek in the town
And the beavers swam all around all around
And the beavers swam all around
And in that pond
(And in that pond)
There were some bugs
(There were some bugs)
The prettiest little bugs
(The prettiest little bugs)
That you ever did see
(That you ever did see)
Well the bugs in the pond
And the pond by the dam
And the dam in the creek
And the creek in the town
And the beavers swam all around all around
And the beavers swam all around

To eat those bugs
(To eat those bugs)
Came fish and frogs
(Came fish and frogs)
The prettiest little things
(The prettiest little things)
That you ever did see
(That you ever did see)
Well the fish and the frogs
And the bugs in the pond
And the pond by the dam
And the dam in the creek
And the creek in the town
And the beavers swam all around all around
And the beavers swam all around
Green Heron eating Sacramento Splittail - Cheryl Reynolds


Some frogs and fish
(Some frogs and fish)
Were ate by birds
(Were ate by birds)
The prettiest little birds
(The prettiest little birds)
That you ever did see
(That you ever did see)
Well the birds eat the fish
And the fish eat the bugs
And the bugs in the pond
And the pond by the dam
And the dam in the creek
And the creek in the town
And the beavers swam all around all around
And the beavers swam all around
Mink - Cheryl Reynolds / Otter - Ron Bruno



Some fish were food
(Some fish were food)
For mink and otter
(For mink and otter)
The prettiest little things
(The prettiest little things)
That you ever did see
(That you ever did see)
Well they both eat the fish
And the birds eat the fish
And the fish eat the bugs
And the bugs in the pond
And the pond by the dam
And the dam in the creek
And the creek in the town
And the beavers swam all around all around
And the beavers swam all around!

Who’s going to be the first to record this for us???


Sometimes you sit quietly blogging about beavers, and you wonder ‘does it make any difference at all?’ Is the world any smarter about living with beavers than it was when I started lo these many years ago? Do folks know any more about flow devices? Or beaver benefits to birds? Or salmon? Or water storage? Do the problems of three little beavers mount up to a hill of beans in this crazy world?

And some days, you wake up to this.

Thanks for all your great work and caring! I would love to be able to link your site to my meager one; ecosystemengineers.wordpress.com Thanks again! Rick

Of course I had to check out the website right away. I found this.

That’s right! A year old blog called “Ecosystem Engineers” from an author in Maine. I just did a beaver background check and saw that he was the fellow who helped Lega last year on the beavers in Bridgeton Small world. Of course this was my favorite part: Apparently we’re founding fathers. Who knew? Off to add him to our blog roll. Beam.

_____________________________________

And then this from yesterday’s Great Blue Heron story:

Dear Dr. Heidi, President and Founder of Worth A Dam (terrific name),

Thank you for kind words about our recent beaver-heron article. Please send me your lodge address and I’ll send you a book with about 300 such essays written 2006 to 2011. There must be 30 that feature our beaver populations and their largely good works since the beavers returned here in 1996. Our Stream Team’s Water Closet column appears weekly in our Ipswich River Watershed Association site and once or twice monthly in the local weekly Tri-Town Transcript. Over the years people have urged us to put our essays on natural and social history with an environmental slant into a book. Last year, I, the author, and other Stream Team members, with professional help did. I’ll send you a copy of The Water Closet: Ipswich River Watershed and Beyond in hope that you will read and review. We would like a review by someone unknown and unconnected. Many people on our mailing lists receiving weekly or who have read the book have said they like the essays. Those that don’t are perhaps too polite. We’ve sold over 200 books and would like to sell more. Money above cost goes to the Middleton Stream Team, a small but long active environmental group.

In any event you are welcome to visit us. We’ll show you some our 40 dams in just small Middleton alone.

Peace, Pike Messenger

Gosh, what a nice email. Any Worth A Dam ambassadors that want to take up Pike’s field trip offer? Of course I said I’d be thrilled to review the book and promote their smart work! And sent their response on to Mike Callahan because all Massachusetts’ beaver friends should definitely meet.

How long do you think it will take the book to arrive?

________________________________________

Final word, Ian’s last art project for the high school he has now left behind involved making ‘little busts’ of his favorite influences. There’s Nick Park, Walt Disney, Jane Goodall, but I thought I’d share this. It’s about two inches tall.


John Muir by Ian Timothy


“In every walk with nature, one receives far more than he seeks.”


Trappers breach dam, herons are missing

In late March a properly licensed trapper cut two 2-ft. wide 2 ½-ft. deep notches in a 170-ft. long beaver dam in the northern tip of Middleton. This dam and the rich wildlife habitat it produced are often featured here in the Water Closet. The trapper set two traps, legal by human law, near these breaches.

The breaches quickly did enormous damage to one of our favorite places in the Ipswich River watershed. At this critical time of the year for wildlife, about one hundred acres were soon without near as much water as the beavers there and we spectators have enjoyed for fourteen years since beavers built the dam in 1999.

The breaches allowed very roughly seven million cubic feet of water to leave the vast impoundment around Pond Meadow Pond and drain into Pond Meadow Brook which took it to Boston Brook and eventually the Ipswich River. The loss changed much of the shallow lake into a place of wide muddy beaches and flats strewn with tree trunks that had fallen and were partially pickled over past decades. Zero to three feet deep impoundment water and mud are somewhat acidic and low in oxygen, hence the preservation. In the draining, much of the impounded area went from 2 ½ feet deep to exposed bottom. In a few biologically active early spring days, rich habitat was greatly changed.

This entire article is so grippingly well written that I’m having a very hard time pulling important bits to share with you. Whatever else you do in your busy long weekend friday, you should really, really go read this. I have written before about the amazing habitat created by beaver ponds for the heron rookery. I have sent that article to folks in Oregon, Utah and Scotland. I have even sent it to a famous author who promptly went to photograph them for his book. These are some well-followed Great Blue Herons. It’s stunning that anyone would let this happen.

The most noticeable habitat there in the last decade has been the aerial great blue heron rookery. About 2005, it was started with a half dozen nests high in beaver drowned, needleless, white pines. There are over 40 nests now in pines still standing. On an afternoon visit the last day of April, we found the rookery strangely silent. The herons, except for three on nests near the Boxford State Forest side of the rookery, were gone. What happened? Our guess is that loss of water below them, due to the breaches, had led to abandonment.

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how Audubon turns into a feathered Worth A Dam. Lets hope this excellent writer decides to submit this article for publication in the chapter journal, and then in the national journal. People need to think about the wildlife they’re going to impact when they trap pesky beavers. Agencies need to require them to think. And articles like this need to make agencies think harder.

Another finding that bothered was the absence of frogs. Usually in hiking the perimeter of the impoundment we’d scare hundreds causing them to leap from shore edge to water. On the last two visits we only startled a half dozen along the remaining shallows. Frogs are certainly an important food for herons. Could their and other aquatic prey decline be reasons for herons moving away?

I don’t know a single person who’s not impressed by the uncannily long and awkwardly graceful Great Blue Heron. When we canoe in the coastal rivers one of our favorite sights is watching them incredibly land in the trees along the water’s edge – they precariously perch and tilt struggling to settle in and it always makes us laugh so hard I’ve never been able to get a good picture. Great Blue Herons are arguably the ‘flag ship’ species of all waterfowl. It’s a big deal to destroy the homes and of 40.

In our opinion there is a great loophole in the Massachusetts’ wetland protection laws, which don’t, with a few minor exceptions, otherwise allow the alteration of wetlands. All human activities that affect beaver impoundments should require a permit from both the Board of Health and the Conservation Commission. More regulations you say? Please put yourself with the voiceless animals in and above the beaver meadows and with their human admirers.

Beautifully written and passionately defended. This is the way to make a difference in how folks see beaver habitats. Look beyond the nuisance and see the wetland.

Here Endeth the Lesson.

Mary Schwalm: Great blue herons at a Rookery at Carter Fields in North Andover. (2 of 4)

Spetacle Lake in Kent, CT has made a proactive decision to improve its fishing, birds and wildlife by hiring Beaver Solutions to manage its culvert problem. Congratulations to everyone involved, because HOA’s are not the known for ecologically wise decisions. And for a cool 5000 a month you can book this cottage to enjoy a ringside seat. Imagine yourself sitting here to watch the evening beaver visit.

Homeowners get nod to deal with beavers

KENT — The North Spectacle Lake Homeowners Association will soon address flooding caused by beaver dams.  The group got the green light Monday from the Inland Wetlands Commission to proceed with its plan to work with Beaver Solutions of Southampton, Mass., to minimize the flooding caused by beavers. The company plans to raise and widen a culvert but not remove the beavers.

Good work, Nutmeg State! You won’t regret it. And moving on to less pleasant discoveries, there’s this news from the Master Chef auditions.

‘MasterChef’ Premiere: Can Roadkill Earn Brian A Spot On The Show?

Texas stay-at-home dad Brian certainly got the attention of the judges with his dish: roadkill. He served up stripped and shaved Cajun beaver tail. “Literally, you could pass that off as beef,” Graham Elliot said, but Brian disagreed with him on that point.

In case you can’t make it out, that’s Chef Brian running onstage wearing a beaver tail after serving beaver tail road kill that apparently tasted like beef to at least one judge.

Ugh.

Need better news? Last night Jr. showed off some new maturity skills, never whining for food from an adult and never provoking a single snap even in side-by-side feeding. Looks like he has adapted to life as a yearling. Congratulations and Happy Birthday!



County takes aim at beaver dams

If you live in Warren County and have a beaver dam on your property, you’re probably going to hear from the county attorney’s office in coming weeks.  The county Board of Supervisors asked county Attorney Martin Auffredou to send letters to those who own property on which beavers have built dams, after county highway crews conducted a survey.

The goal is to inform property owners they may be liable if a dam bursts and damages public or private property, and supervisors hope property owners will decide to remove the beavers and/or their dams safely, said Chester Supervisor Fred Monroe, chairman of the county Board of Supervisors Legislative & Rules Committee.

Lord knows, we don’t like for the government to tell us how many guns to have, or whether we can spank our children or what kind of pesticides to use near our creeks, but apparently it’s perfectly fine to send spies onto private property to count how many have beaver dams, and tell them to get rid of them. Honestly, sometimes I don’t know whether to laugh or cry. It’s bad enough that cities quickly dispatch them on public land. But now you’ve got to scare property owners who appreciate them? Let’s hope your message is neither convincing nor contagious.

The decline of the trapping industry has led to a growing beaver population, Monroe said.  “Property owners need to understand there could be some liability if a beaver dam goes,” he said. “If it’s on public property, the municipalities can take care of them, but it’s a difficult problem if it’s on private property.”

The state Department of Environmental Conservation can issue permits to landowners and municipalities to have nuisance beavers trapped and their dams removed.  Stony Creek Supervisor Frank Thomas said the DEC should handle removal of nuisance beavers, with Monroe pointing out the animals technically belong to the state.

Trapping is an industry now? An industry in decline! Stand back – here’s yet another  politician at his desk fondly missing the days when it was easier and more profitable to kill beavers.  Get me a tissue. Do you really think they’ve thought this through? What if a landowner rips out the beaver dam, and the draining of water and reduction in hyporheic exchange causes a subsequent drop in the water table, and their neighbor’s well dries up? Is he liable for that too?

We need something nice after that article. Isn’t he looking fine! I think we are about a week before his first birthday.

Jr at secondary dam: Cheryl Reynolds

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