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

Month: May 2018


Last evening I was settling down with a new episode of Handmaid’s tale and had to stop in my tracks because a beaver alert hit my inbox. And OOHHH what a beaver alert! Get ready for a very nearly PERFECT report on beaver benefits from the public radio station in Colorado. I’m starting to realize that once the book is published there’s going to be a lot of this. Beaver message saturation in more ways than one.

Short On Water In The Mountains? Beavers, To The Rescue

 

Honestly, except for the obligatory throwing beavers from planes reference this is the PERFECT report. Wonderful to hear from Ellen and Ben and see new grad student research on the horizon.

And a beaver CANDIDATE? Be still my heart!

Go listen if you haven’t already. 5 minutes of your life that will affirm, thrill and educate you.  Send it to three friends that need convincing. And then leave a comment telling Luke Runyon what a great job he did.

Short On Water In The Mountains? Beavers, To The Rescue

 


Leopold Kanzler lives in Austria and has taken some of my very favorite beaver photos. In addition to being hugely talented, he is wildly patient and animals just seem to get comfortable around him. Check out his newest offering.

“He Likes Trees”: Leopold Kanzler

Time is ticking down. The other day I was browsing for information about Ben Goldfarb’s book coming out and was surprised to find an event already logged at the San Francisco Book Passage.   It’s so wild to think about his message of beaver benefits making its way across the country.

I think his head must be spinning a little too because he posted this on facebook yesterday.

SAN FRANCISCO on June 26 PORTLAND on July 2 BOSTON on July 31

=June 25: Healdsburg SHED, Healdsburg CA, 7:30 pm
-June 26: Book Passage, San Francisco CA, 6 pm
-June 27: Science Buzz Cafe, Sebastopol CA, 7 pm

-June 28: Screening of Sarah Koenigsberg‘s wonderful documentary “The Beaver Believers,” Empress Theatre,   Vallejo CA (I’ll be on a panel after the film).

-June 29: Copperfield’s Books, San Rafael CA, 7 pm
-June 30: Martinez Beaver Festival, Martinez CA, 1:30 pm
-July 2: Powell’s on Hawthorne, Portland OR, 7:30 pm
-July 3: West Linn Public Library, West Linn OR, 6 pm
-July 18: Yale-Myers Forest Seminar, Eastford CT, 7 pm
-July 20: Northshire Books, Manchester Center VT, 6 pm
-July 26: RJ Julia Booksellers, Madison CT, 7 pm
-July 31: Harvard Bookstore, Cambridge MA, 7 pm
-August 1: Tin Mountain Conservation Center, Conway NH, 7 pm
-August 2: Ridgefield Public Library, Ridgefield CT, 7 pm
-August 3: Litchfield County Summer Book Fair, Sharon CT, 5 pm
-August 4: David M. Hunt Library, Falls Village CT, 1 pm

That’s the kind of schedule that has you living out of a suitcase and eating cereal. It’s so wonderful that Ben is young and strong and up to the task! Can you imagine how many new beaver friends there will be in 6 months? I was especially startled to see the book is even available for pre-order at Target!

All I can say is that if folks don’t get the idea THIS SUMMER that beavers matter – what with Ben’s book and Sarah’s film and our festival – there is literally no hope for them.

Now we just need a huge donor to buy copies for every member of CDFW – and force them to read it.


The internet is responsible for many bad things, spyware, pornography, spam, fake news, Donald Trump, etc. But there are wonderful things about it too. Because it made it possible over the weekend to track down this quote by John Muir from his paper on the Forests of Oregon. I can’t describe how pleased I was  to finally find some words by Muir on my favorite subject! I had to make a graphic for emphasis.

I can’t tell you what a feeling it is to read that. Living in Martinez, John Muir’s home for 25 years and the town where he is buried it just felt SO WRONG not to hear him weigh in on the importance of beavers. You can tell in this quote that he knew beavers had the last laugh.  I found it in a collection of essays and correspondence called “Steep Trails” carefully published  four years after his death.  Looking at this made me wonder where the phrase ‘beaver meadows’ first came from and how Muir knew it?

Viva Las Vegas– When explorer Antonio Armijo came upon the place in 1829, he found bubbling springs, abundant beavers, and grassy beaver meadows. Armijo named the site Las Vegas – Spanish for “the meadows.” Beavers do much to shape the natural landscape. They fell trees along creeks and stack the logs and branches into dams. Before long, they’ve created wetlands that are magnets for nesting birds, from ducks and rails to warblers and blackbirds, like this one. In time, the beavers move on. The ponds fill gradually with soil and organic debris. They give way to marshes, the marshes to wet meadows, which dry a bit and, at last, to fertile expanses of green meadows. Las vegas.

It hurts my heart to read about Las Vegas as a green meadow filled with and by beavers, I doubt that Muir read Armijo, so I still wonder how he knew it. Apparently it was generally used to because Ben just wrote that it was used by in the trapping account of Black Beaver published in 1911.   It was used widely enough that there are several towns called ‘beaver meadows’ so I’m still interested in how Muir came by it.

I also found this:

Indians, no doubt, have ascended most of the rivers on their way to the mountains to hunt the wild sheep and goat to obtain wool for their clothing, but with food in abundance on the coast they had little to tempt them into the wilderness, and the monuments they have left in it are scarcely more conspicuous than those of squirrels and bears; far less so than those of the beavers, which in damming the streams have made clearings and meadows which will continue to mark the landscape for centuries.

 

Steep Trails, John Muir
A collection of writings published in 1918, after his death
Chapter XVIII The Forests of Washington

Do you think maybe he wrote this at the ‘scribble desk’ in his home in Martinez? I hope so. I hope so. I hope so.


Price Edward Island looms large in my mind for exactly two reasons. The first because it was home of  the very famous fictitious town of Avonlea where Lucy Maud Montgomery set the story of her delightful heroine “Anne of Avonlea” in 1908. The beloved book has been translated into 36 languages and sold over 50 million copies, and is foremost among the things every slightly imaginative child reads in her early years.

The second thing I learned about P.E.I. is that it has a notoriously complicated relationship with beavers – even to the point of insisting at one time that they weren’t native to the island.  Their intolerance and ignorance of beavers is among one of the first things I ever came to learn on this twisted journey. Like you, I had once thought they were impervious to the things that other parts of Canada had learned in regards to their value.

Mark today on the calendar because that  might not be true any more.

11 things you always wanted to know about beavers on P.E.I.

Beavers have been in the news on P.E.I. recently — some have been busy builders in Bedeque and another was a visible victim of illness in the P.E.I. National Park.

“Beavers are almost ubiquitous, and virtually every watershed in the province would have some presence of beavers,” says Garry Gregory, a P.E.I. wildlife biologist with Forests, Fish and Wildlife who agreed to share his extensive knowledge of beavers.

Did you catch that? Not only do beavers belong here, but they belong practically everywhere! Garry Gregory is that remarkable biologist that knows his beavers. In fact, of the 11 facts he gives the paper only ONE of them is obviously incorrect. (After 11 years of reading beaver misinformation I am definitely grading on a curve – he gets an A in my book.”. Fact #7 is my personal favorite.

“If a beaver is present in a wetland, it’s not hard to tell,” Gregory said. 

Beavers can’t help their natural instinct to build dams to protect themselves, Gregory said. They also build dams in order to flood land.

“A beaver is a bit clumsy on land, but if it can swim to its food, then it’s much more readily available to him,” Gregory explained. “So he’ll flood a large area to create a large surface area of pond.” 

Not only do beavers want their ponds to be wide, they also want them deep, Gregory said. Since they do not hibernate, they need water to be deep enough that the water doesn’t freeze all the way to the bottom.

While dams and flooding can be a nuisance, the positive part of the beaver’s natural industry is that dams create a lot of wetland habitat for species such as songbirds and bats. 

“So they’re incredibly important landscape architects,” said Gregory. “Sometimes it’s a bit overlooked, their importance.”

I also like how the article has several photos and NOT ONE of them is a nutria or muskrat or prairie dog! Practically unheard of!

His one mistaken fact is about how long beavers can hold their breath – he says only 4-5 minutes which is true for the otter but not for the beaver which can, as you know, hold its breath three times longer. I’m okay with that mistake because if people think they need to be MORE careful about letting beavers breathe that’s cool with me. (I was way more upset by the snapple lid that once upon a time said they could hold their breath for 45 minutes! Sheesh! Lawsuit waiting to happen!)

Welcome to the beaver defenders club, Garry. We are so glad to have you! As Anne herself one wisely noted:

“Kindred spirits are not so scarce as I used to think”


Robin Ellison of Napa found this adorable video recently. It was taken in the Montreal Biodome. It’s very badly titled because it’s neither funny nor building a dam. Still., I love two things about this video. The raised hands “thank you all for coming” beaver who looks like a combination between Moses and Elvis. And the oohs and aahs of the impressed crowd which we heard in real life a thousand times at our own beaver habitat. Because beavers ARE impressive.

Correct that. I love three things about this video. I also love how that beaver snips the ornamental aspen they planted in the habitat because it “looked pretty”.

He obviously thinks it tastes pretty too.

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