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

Month: October 2013


Wine country

Worth A Dam was the first stop yesterday in the garden wildlife display of the Nature and optics fair at Cornerstone, Sonoma. We met people who had attended my talk at Madrone Audubon, or Valley of the Moon and knew all about why beavers were good for creeks, people who had followed the story on the news, or even come to Martinez to see them, and people who were on vacation from their water-side property in Idaho, Colorado, New York and Maine that couldn’t wait to get home and try installing a flow device on their land to manage beaver activity! Let’s just say it was a good day and well spent. Cheryl, Jon, Lory and Ron were all on hand to make things run smoothly and we invited many new folks to this years beaver festival.

Apparently they could of used at the waterside at Powdermill Creek in Michigan this week. I’ll explain:

 Bessemer biology class: A river runs through it

BESSEMER — Recently, biology students at the A.D. Johnston High School in Bessemer spent the morning learning about watersheds and forestry while at Powdermill Creek.

 The annual event exposes students to wildlife and fisheries biology in addition to forest ecology and succession.

 According to biology teacher Dave Rowe, “the partnership that has developed between the school, the U.S. Forest Service, private businesses and community members has really paid big dividends. When my students see the practical application of what we talk about in the classroom in a real world setting, they see biology from a new perspective.”

So far so good. Students going down to the creek to learn biology from the outside. US Forest service teaching how it all fits together. What’s not to like?

“Now, the area that we sample favors game species such as brook trout because of the cold, fast moving water and the ample shade and undercut banks,” he said. “Ten years ago this same area was a meadow due to the activity of beavers and the game species such as brook trout were less common and fish such as creek chubs, black nosed dace and white suckers were more common.”

Yes, another cheerful article of rangers teaching children that the fishing is better now that we got rid of all those ICKY BEAVERS. Because all brook trout really need is fast moving water. They don’t actually need rich insect communities to eat inside that water- just the water itself. And when the fast water scours all the invertibrate-sustaining sediment off the bottom of the pond and makes over cut banks they couldn’t be happier because they need the shade. Never mind that deep pools near beaver dams cool temperatures through hyporheic exchange and have very complex insect populations for fish to enjoy and fatten while they eat other fish. Its not like fishermen like to catch larger fish, right?

Well, we worked hard yesterday, but obviously we have a lot more work to do.


Using beaver deceivers to lower dam water

The Beaver is nocturnal and the second largest rodent in the world. While their dams provide ponds to protect against predators – right now in Fraser those dams are flooding the town with drainage pipes underwater – potentially causing more damage downstream.

 There’s water inlets and outlets all along here that are getting clogged up,” Durbin said.

So, the plan is to use a secret weapon to outsmart the beaver – taking PVC pipe and punching holes in beaver dams to let the water out.  The devices they call beaver deceivers.  “The beaver deceiver we had was working keeping the pond levels lower,” Durbin said.

 The only problem is that the bold beavers are deceiving the beaver deceivers and plugging up the pipes.

When I was two I used to turn my red tricycle upside down and crank the peddle around to make it an “Ice cream truck”.  I could ask people what flavor they wanted and magically make it appear from the spokes. I could even make the little tune of the truck on its rounds.

It resembled an ACTUAL ice cream truck in much the same as a pipe stuck through a dam resembles a true beaver deceiver.

Goodness people will work very hard to avoid doing the right thing, won’t they?  We are so lucky that the city manager of Martinez at the time didn’t listen to all the folks at that November 7th meeting and instruct our public works crew to “stick a pipe through the dam” to make a deceiver. Because when our beavers plugged the pipe (as any beaver yet known to man will almost certainly do) the city would have gotten rid of them as quickly as Fraser.

Call this a “people deceiver”. Because it appears to solve the problem humanely and is in fact guaranteed to fail and justify a more lethal solution. As I once said of the bumbling Bakersfield“,

We tried saving the beavers humanely by wrapping the trees in cellophane and hello kitty dolls, but it just didn’t work!”

The town administrator already knows what to do because he’s gotten several letters from yours truly. I will write him again, because it is theoretically possible that there might be hope for this bewildered steward yet.

Unfortunately I can’t same the same for the news team. Sheesh.

 


Pittsfield solves beaver problem at Wild Acres pond humanely

In conjunction with Beaver Solutions, highway… (Stephanie Zollshan / Berkshire Eagle Staff)

“Everybody in the pool,” Dan Osterander yelled out, as he and other city workers stepped into the pond and installed a fence to keep out the beavers Friday morning. The crew used an excavator to remove twigs and mud that formed the dam.

 They were joined by Michael Callahan of Beaver Solutions, who was contracted by the city to find a humane solution to a flooding problem city officials blame on the critters.

 On Friday, Callahan took 50 paces into five-feet deep pond waters to place a cage that will connect the pipes to where the city has its own dam to control the water.

 Callahan has a thriving business thanks to a Massachusetts law which prevents the lethal trapping of beavers. Any disturbance of a beaver dam requires a special permit.

Looks like our good friend Mike is busily convincing another city that beavers are Worth A Dam. (Although the reporter continues to be under the impression that we would only install a flow device because of the evil 1996 law. Apparently he has failed to notice that beavers can STILL being trapped and killed and cities routinely get permission to do so – even with grip traps if one of nine exceptions are met. Nor has he thought about the fact that if you pay a trapper $500 to take out some beavers one year, and new beavers move in the next year, you’ll pay it again and again, adding up to way more than hiring Mike.)

Never mind. We’re always happy when public works crews have to jump in the water and help someone install a flow device.

The owner of the farm has complained about high water levels at the pond, said Jim McGrath, Pittsfield’s park and open space planner.  The Bousquet Ski Area needs the water for snowmaking in the winter.

 Van Derkar, a Pittsfield conservation agent and former wildlife biologist, said beavers shouldn’t be negatively impacted by the city’s work.

 “It shouldn’t affect them. That’s the whole goal,” Van Derkar said. “We need to be able to work with them.

Here endeth the lesson.Capture1

When’s the last time you went wine tasting in the Autumn with about 1000 other wildlife lovers? Oh wait, never? Then you should come join us at Cornerstone in Sonoma for the 2nd annual Optics and Nature fair. Worth A Dam will be there with lots of folks you know and some you’ll be very excited to meet. You can learn about lions or owls or beavers, and if you decide to pick up an extra pair of binoculars for junior the optics folks will pay the sales tax.  See you there?


Beavers end government shutdown!

Well, almost. Check out this fun article  from KZOK about Sarah’s beaver heading to D.C. to fix the dam congress.  Besides knowing how to cooperate and finish what they start, beavers know something about working with obstructions!

Sarah’s Beaver Ends Government Shut-Storm!

Sarah’s Beaver, unlike some folks in our state, loves it some good government. All this grandstanding over “Obamacare” had got the United States Government shut down completely, which spelled danger for North America’s largest rodent.

 “This is bulls***”, thought the Beaver, and it stowed away on a flight to our nation’s capitol to talk some sense into our state’s congressional delegation.

 Sarah’s Beaver went and met with the Washington State Delegation of the only group in America less popular than Nickleback or dog poop. Congressman (and former King County Sheriff) Dave Reichert (R-Eastside) was the only one of them who would agree to a photograph, but guess what? No sooner did the Beaver get back to Seattle, than the squabbling grown-up toddlers managed to come to some kind of agreement, and the Government of the United States of America can get back to protecting Beavers!

Did I mention I love the state of Washington? I might put this photo on my fridge. Come to think of it, wouldn’t you LOVE a photo with every member of our city council holding a beaver? I can’t believe its never been done. Wow, maybe John Muir too?

Speaking of great photos Cheryl sent this that her boss snapped on the freeway yesterday. Mazel tov! What an excellent way to start out.

CaptureThis photo I love has the very strange fortune of have been taken by me and not by Cheryl for a change. Talk about a face that could launch a thousand ships. I call it “Things are Looking UP!”

kit looking upFinally there’s a nice report on the California Fur trade from Michael Ellis on PBS this morning. Years ago he brought a group to see our beavers and we have swapped emails. Still, he’s not exactly a believer. (Yet) In this report he refers to them as “rats”. Obviously there are about a million things he needs to mention about beavers other than the fur trade. Starting with the drought, erosion and wildlife damage we caused when we wiped them out. But its a nice report, and you should go listen.

Beavers

Michael Ellis looks at how the fabulous fur of the beaver shaped the history of California and the West.


I have very exciting news for you today, but first a very thorny question that has plagued me half the night. What is wrong with me? Why are my powers of persuasion so completely  lacking? I’m referring, of course, to the vote you didn’t cast yesterday for Beaver Whisperers. Where did I go wrong? Was it my sales pitch? Our website stats tell me that on any given day some 600 people are reading this site, and I see 40 of you went and voted. That means I completely failed to persuade 560 people who ostensibly care about beavers. What is the matter with me?

vote
Go Vote

You can vote  until Friday, its super easy and you don’t have to register, and technically you’re not voting not for the thing you haven’t seen yet but for the dam cam you CAN see any time you wish. Maybe I didn’t implore enough. Maybe I’m too bossy. Maybe you were busy with the carpool and the cable bill, but please go vote. If it wins the CBC is way more likely to do another beaver project down the road, and more people will learn how good beavers are. We all want that, right?

Alright, now speaking of the CBC there’s a bright and shiny new beaver website on the block. It’s cleverly called “Leave it to beavers : watershed stewardship”. It’s a joint venture by the Ann & Sandy Cross Conservation Area (ASCCA) and the  Alberta Institute for Wildlife Conservation.  Seems they bit the bullet and undertook a beaver relocation a while ago onto their vast conservation land and are using students and citizen science to keep track of the difference it is making. You can practically still see the price tag on the websites involved, shining with their resident Glynnis Hood, but their teacher section has nothing in it and can you believe they do not mention the valiant effort of Martinez or Worth A Dam at all? Well, I’ll do what I can to change that. In the mean time, welcome to the ‘hood!

(Pun intended.)

Now onto the exciting beaver news! Last night was action packed at the dam. The water was clear and you could see the lovely webbed feet of the kits, junior and mom. The third dam has been built up considerably, and its practically wider than the secondary now.  Obviously the beavers have a vision for their habitat that they haven’t included me in.

Bring a beaver to work day 008
Third Dam


That’s our kit from last year. Isn’t he turning out lovely? How much do you wanna bet that third dam is mostly his work? The kits were in fine form and eager to follow Jr around doing everything he did. We probably saw all three, but one at a time so its hard to be sure.

We have one kit that is still very much a baby, not wanting to do more grown up things like his siblings. In case you’re not sure what it looks like when a kit acts like a baby, watch him eat.

Mom came out and went straight to work on the secondary dam. That is definitely HER responsibility and she takes it very seriously. She swam around with one of the kits a bit to make sure they were interested.

Then Heidi put her camera away, satisfied with working beavers well on their way to a mature family. The couple beside us we had met at Wildbirds. She tabled for Audubon and we were busily chatting away when we saw one of the kits come up beside mom and plop some mud onto the dam where she was working. The kit dove and got some more. Then paddled away and came back with a stick to add in its place. Even when Mom swam away, satisfied that the leak was patched, that kit kept working.

5 months old and well on his way to being a real beaver!

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