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

Month: October 2018


Time for some vote-inspired beaver writing. This one from our friends who never realize they’re writing about beavers.

How do we cope with demands for water as we enter an era of scarcity?

Urban water systems in California and elsewhere face a time of reckoning, warns Richard Luthy, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Stanford.

Groundwater aquifers are being depleted and rivers are drying up, even as demand for water keeps climbing. Yet cities can no longer meet society’s thirst by importing more water from far away. Luthy, however, is optimistic. As director of the National Science Foundation’s ReNUWIt effort—short for Re-Inventing the Nation’s Urban Water Infrastructure—he helps to develop alternative sources through wastewater recycling, stormwater capture and desalination.

“We will have to make big investments, just as we had to make big investments a century ago in dams and aqueducts,” he says. “But with good decisions, we should be in good shape.”

Wait, I know this one. Shhh don’t tell me the answer, I can guess.

California has a long-standing “Public Trust Doctrine,” which holds that we have to protect the “common heritage” of streams, lakes, rivers and marshlands. Following a 1983 case about how Los Angeles was diverting water from Mono Lake, the California Supreme Court ruled that “common heritage” meant protecting recreation, aesthetic values and the ecology. The decision meant people had to leave more water for ecosystems and for fish.

Put all this together, and it means that we need to set aside more groundwater for our aquifers and more surface water for our rivers, streams and lakes—even though the state’s population and economy are still growing. These aren’t just challenges for California. The same issues are arising in the Southwest, in Texas, in parts of Florida and in Atlanta. We are experiencing it first, but we’re hardly alone.

I’m thinking of this animal that stores water better than we do and does it in a way that benefits a whole lot of critters. Can you guess what I’m thinking?

Of course his recommendation has nothing to do with beaver. It involves reusing water and installing recycling plants to collect grey water. Never mind your endearing rodents that would raise the water table and keep valuable resources on the land. They don’t matter.

Which brings us to measure 3.

California Proposition 3, Water Infrastructure and Watershed Conservation Bond Initiative (2018)

If you’ve been paying attention you’d know that the Nature Conservancy supports this and the Sierra club opposes it. My friends on the waterboard and the urban streams support it and say its essential to the work to protect salmon, the SF Chronicle and East by Express says its a give away to agriculture interests who should invest money to solve their own water problem.

What’s a beaver supporting ecologist to do?

Feel free to write or post your thoughts and advice. I can’t imagine that any water measure that divides the conservationists into two camps can ever pass anyway, so it might be moot.

 
But I know what I’d vote fore if it was on the ballot. And I’m saving that story.

Is there ever a fun beaver tragedy? This just might qualify, no human or beaver  casualties, just some damage that I’m sure insurance will cover. Besides, it made me smile, and precious little is doing that this Thursday.

German beaver fells tree on to yacht

Police said a couple making their way down the Müritz-Elbe waterway were “very lucky” to have survived the incident. Once on the brink of extinction, the beaver is making a comeback in Germany and across Europe.

A German couple narrowly escaped death when a large tree came crashing down on their yacht, state maritime police said on Monday.

A beaver felled a tree when the couple was traveling through the Müritz-Elbe waterway in the eastern German state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.

The beaver had managed to bite its way through a 20-meter-high (65.6-feet-high) poplar tree. The felled tree caused thousands of euros in damage to the yacht.

Isn’t that just always the case? If its not little thugs tagging your beemer in the whole foods parking lot, its dam beavers felling a tree onto your yacht! Honestly, being wealthy isn’t the cake walk it used to be.

Chalk it up to the unpleasant consequences of biodiversity. You’re welcome.

 


Let’s say, (and why not?) that you have a younger brother who  never ever studies for his spelling tests. They’ve tried to persuade him with gold stars and candy bars. They’ve tried scolding. They’ve even told him he couldn’t play outside until he studied and he sat dreamily at the kitchen table making car noises for hours without learning anything,

Yet one day, without any threatening, coaxing or nudging he sits down at the table saturday morning and starts copying them out. His actual spelling words! No doodles or car noises, He does it three times over and over and marches into class monday as confident as a new boy. You are SO proud!

Everyone makes a big deal of how proud they are. mickey mouse pancakes for breakfast and his favorite peanut butter and banana sandwich packed for lunch. And when he comes zooming through the door at the end of the day and shows off his test, you keep right on smiling.

  1. kat      2. sleepe      3. todae     4. rihgt     5. wak

Because, as in all things, how you commit to getting ready to do the thing, is more important than what you actually do at first. He is learning the system. It can improve over time. What he needed to do was to really try. To get into a habit of applying his effort, The rest is just a matter of getting the details. Right?

Now tell that to Tennessee,

Two beavers removed from Sinking Creek wetlands

The challenges of urban wildlife management in Murfreesboro came to a head recently when two beavers were lethally removed from the Sinking Creek wetland system after their dam caused water to rise over park paths and creep closer to nearby homes and businesses.

City spokesman Mike Browning confirmed the beavers were removed after efforts to lower the water levels did not work.

“The parks system is trying to do everything they can to enhance and make sure that the habitat in that wetlands area is strong,” said Browning, citing an increase in herons, frog habitat and some plant species.

Wait, what? A city spokesman from Tennessee saying there’s new wide life habitat because of the beavers and they tried to lower the water levels? Is this a trick?

“We wanted to try to work with the beavers,” Recreation Superintendent Rachel Singer said. “It was high priority on our list, to work with these beavers and not just to go in and remove them right away.”

The Parks and Recreation Department began monitoring the water levels and dam size in November of 2017. Since the department has a contract with the United States Department of Agriculture, the following April Singer brought its Wildlife Services division on board to help.

Ohh you crazy little brother. Copying your spelling words for the first time. Bringing in WILDLIFE SERVICES of all people to HELP SAVE BEAVER. Hold on, I’m laughing too hard, I can’t type. Shhhh,

According to an emailed statement from Blaine Hyle, a wildlife biologist at the USDA, the first attempt to fix the problem was a pipe through the dam to keep water flowing. Beavers discovered and destroyed the pipe, called a pond leveller. Wildlife Services began regularly breaching the dam after installing two more pipes, carefully hidden from the beavers.

“They didn’t find it and they didn’t clog it, however we just could not get the water levels to recede,” Singer said. “There’s several properties along Highland that were concerned, the actual road of Highland (Avenue) was a concern … We just looked at every option that we could to try to work with the beavers, and determined that unfortunately there wasn’t anything more we could do.

Wouldn’t you pay all the money in your pockets to see that pipe? I’m sure it was the thickness if a quarter and the reason the beavers didn’t plug it was because it was not draining enough water to bother them. Raise your hand if you really think that just because WS put in something they called a pond leveler it actually was one.

When I was four, for example, I told my sister in all seriousness that I could fly.

Justyna Kostkowska, a member of Friends of Sinking Creek Wetlands who lives near the site, wishes the situation had been handled differently, and more openly. Her group organized to preserve the wetlands in 2017 when condos were proposed for the area. The group’s membership includes environmental consultants, an environmental engineer and a biology professor.

“The place was flourishing. There were more birds, there were more fish, the water was incredibly clean. Beavers manage wetlands incredibly well and are a sign of a healthy ecosystem.” Kostkowska said. “So, we were very thrilled they were there.”

I take back everything I was thinking about Tennessee. Justyna is clearly a kindred spirit. She has a Ph.D. and wants to save beavers. We could have been sisters! She’s just not as suspicious of wildlife services as me, which is a perfectly normal thing to be. Knowing what I know now I would never NEVER NEVER trust them to solve a beaver problem without resorting to trapping.

Friends of Sinking Creek Wetlands found out the beavers had been killed only after noticing a path had been mowed to the area and the water drained.

“We contacted the city manager and the mayor. They told me that beavers had been removed according to USDA protocol,” Kostkowska said.

Instead, the beavers were removed earlier this month by Wildlife Services using “industry-approved body grip traps.” The total bill from the USDA for 29 site visits, materials and lethal removal was $3,517.

Wow! That’s a lot of money to fail! Let me be absolutely clear Justyna,, Wildlife Services didn’t kill the beavers and your city didn’t lie to you and avoid letting the truth out as long as they possibly could because you live in Tennessee. This isn’t a state problem This isn’t a southern problem. It could have happened exactly like this anywhere in the nation. It would have happened in Martinez. if we hadn’t done ever single thing we possibly could to make it otherwise. And even then it was partly luck.

No, all cities lie about beavers, WS kills beavers. Its practically their raison d’être so to speak, and it takes valiant and sustained effort to interrupt that, even for a little while. I will try and make sure you have all the resources at your fingertips before this happens again,

And Justyna?

 


Sarah Koenigsberg and her beaver film are in Canada. Here film is screening at the Banff Mountain Festival. In the meantime she is busy stocking up supplies to calm her frazzled nerves. This photo smiled at me from FB. Look, she found our much admired wine “Frisy Beaver”. I still want them to donate to the festival.

I like “beaver riot” on her shirt too. That’s clever. There may be an homage in our future!

Meanwhile the film will go next to Calgary where it will debut the night before our election {GO VOTE} in the science building of the University of Calgary campus.

The Beaver Believers, U of C Film Screening

Monday, November 5, 2018 from 5:00 PM to 6:30 PM (MST)Calgary, Alberta

Join director Sarah Koenigsberg for a private screening of her new film “The Beaver Believers”, a film about “passion and perserverence in an era of climate change”.  Filmed in 8 western US states, Mexico, and Canada, this film focuses on the restoration and management of the North American beaver in watersheds of the American West.  

This event is being sponsored by The Miistakis Institute (www.rockies.ca) and the Alberta Riparian Habitat Management Society (Cows and Fish) (www.cowsandfish.org). 

So many of our friends together in one place! Hurray! I knew C&F would want to be part of a screening. I’m so glad its coming together so nicely in this “year of the beaver”.

Speaking of which, I heard from Ben Goldfarb that he liked he film and Robin pointed out that he had uploaded one of his own about some beaver relocation he was part of in Washington. Enjoy.

Now I’m off to the sierras for little late autumn. We missed the best showing but wish us a little color anyway.

HOPE VALLEY CALIFORNIA

Delicious autumn! My very soul is wedded to it,
and if I were a bird I would fly about the earth
seeking the successive autumns.”

George Eliot


Time for some very good news from our just-over-the-border friends in Port Moody. B.C.  They’ve been fretting because the city just pre-released it’s “Beaver Management Plan” – you know the one they said they’d do to pacify the angry residents after their scheme “accidentally” drowned the kit last year.

Well the long-awaited beaver management plan turned down the imminently qualified Ben Dittbrenner to solve their problem, and instead employed a salmon-savvy husband and wife team that knew nothing about at all about the animals. Jim and Judy were getting panicked and ready to appeal the decision but then the nicest thing happened.

Canada voted last week.

You may have heard something about the other, more infamous and smokable parts of their decision. Turns out the city elections were even more exciting. Port Moody voted to throw the old bad mayor OUT and bring in the young enthusiastic and environmentally savvy man that Jim and Judy were backing.

TADA!!!

Tri-cities Election Results: Young mayors elected in Port Coquitlam and Port Moody

In Port Moody, challenger Rob Vagramov, who is 28 years old, beat incumbent Mike Clay. Vagramov denied Clay a third term as mayor with 4,545 votes to Clay’s 4,161, a difference of under 400 votes.

Vagramov’s campaign was based on what he called the “Metrotownification of Port Moody” with too many high-rise towers, which resonated with voters.

He and Clay clashed over the pace of real estate development. Clay felt a waterfront mill site, which sits near a park as well as transit, could be developed like the False Creek or Coal Harbour communities in Vancouver.

Vagramov’s stance on a slower pace of building was seen as an appeal to younger voters, but in late September, a video, filmed in 2014, showing Vagramov baiting a homeless person to drink beer in exchange for a sandwich

drew hot debate on social media.

What? You mean not selling every asset your city has as quickly as possible is popular with the voters? Next thing you know you’ll be telling me that urban green spaces and wildlife actually matter! Who knew?

CONGRATULATIONS JIM, JUDY AND ALL YOUR LUCKY BEAVERS!!! Things are looking a whole lot better today than they did last week!

Now we just have to take care of America. Which makes it a perfect time to post this.

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