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

Month: April 2019


Now you know that not just any beaver-killing article is going to get my attention. This ain’t my first rodeo, after all, and I’ve written about pretty much every variation you can think of regarding beavers flooding basketball courts or storm drains. You have to exceptional these days to get MY attention, with such a dazzling array of beaver stupid.

But this from Searcy Arkansas qualifies.

Breaking down beaver dams

Residents had been complaining about their lawns flooding in Skyline Meadows, which is directly beneath the hills of Skyline Drive, due to clutter in Gin Creek and beaver problems in a privately-owned wetland.

Beaver dams were threatening to flood the Skyline Meadows neighborhood until Wednesday when Harding University students broke through them during Bisons for Christ.

Now to be clear, the article doesn’t mean actual bisons. It means youth volunteers that team up during lent to do various jobs working hard. Because you know that old saying, “work like a – bison”. (?)

Beavers had dammed up a drainage ditch for all the water runoff for the right end of Skyline Meadows into Gin Creek, and had created around an acre of standing water that varied from an inch or two in depth to about 16 inches deep as of Wednesday. There are also multiple larger dams in that piece of Gin Creek itself, which is owned by Southwest Middle School.

“We’ll get those 4-5-inch rains and you see 2 inches flowing down the street,” Leroy Painter said of water draining into the nature preserve. “You can’t even see the street [for all the running water].”

“The No. 1 thing I can think of,” Leroy Painter said of problems with beavers, “is the mosquito problem [due to still water not running off], and the concern that eventually the water will have nowhere to go.”

You understand of course, BISON may be for christ, but obviously beavers are satanists. Bringing in mosquitoes and making baptismal ponds in everyone’s garden just wily-nily. They must be stopped by actions that require all hands on deck. Remember, it takes a village.

About 1,500 students were involved in 150 projects all over Searcy and White County, but it was men’s social club Gamma Sigma Phi that went as a group to work on clearing the beavers dams and wood buildup due both to beavers chewing trees off at the trunk and trees dying thanks to being in standing water all the time.

“That’s what it’s basically all about,” Gamma Sigma Phi member Matthew Morgan of Springfield, Mo., said of working on the project for Bisons for Christ, “to give back to the community and serve others.”

Nate Ham of Marion said the project was close to his heart because a friend of his lost his home in a flood two or three years ago when the flooding had gotten very serious in the West Memphis/Marion area.

“It’s not a good thing when houses get water to them,” Ham said. “His trailer almost floated away with the water.”

Well now, an article like this comes along once in a great while and you have to treat it like the precious message it is. You have to tuck the phrase “Bisons for Christ” into your arsenal and treat it with the full glory it deserves. I’m not greedy. I don’t expect it to get any better than this.

“Hopefully we’ll solve the problem before there is one,” Gamma Sigma Phi queen, Danielle O’Shields of Cabot said. (A queen is an honorary female member of a men’s social club.)

So these particular bisons for Christ have a QUEEN which gets to be an honorary member of their fraternity brotherhood. Letting a woman be in your special man-club. Golly, it just doesn’t get better than that. Except their’s a photo of the queen hauling refuge from the satanic dam. I gotta admit,

That’s a little better.

Searcy Parks and Recreation Director Mike Parsons said the beavers have been particularly bad this year, and it has been a struggle keeping them from causing damage in the areas where beavers go, which he said is primarily in the section of Gin Creek north of Berryhill Park and in the Searcy Soccer Complex.

“When they’re by Berryhill Park we normally just break up the dams and they go somewhere else,” Parsons said. “It’s a bit more difficult at the soccer complex. They build their dams and block our drainage pipes, causing lots of issues.”

Parsons said when the parks have a beaver problem, Searcy Parks and Recreation contacts the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission for a referral for a trapper who will legally catch and relocate the beavers.

“The problem we have with beavers is, unless you get rid of them, they keep coming back to the same general areas,” Parsons said.

Game, set and match. That makes this the best beaver-killing article of 2019 and it’s only April. For those of you keeping score at home that would be a full score of five outta five on the beaver-ignorance meter.

  1. The mistaken belief that beavers cause mosquitoes
  2. The faulty effort to  destroy beaver dam to get rid of beavers
  3. Thinking beavers leave if their dam is destroyed.
  4. Writing that you hire a trapper to ‘relocate beaver’
  5. The belief that UNLESS they are trapped they will return.

That’s a full house team Searcy! You really outdid yourself and gave us beaver-heathens something to sing about. Of course if you weren’t committed to the idea that beavers are NOT for Christ, would have given you something to really sing about.

“They got the whole pond, in their hands.
They got the whole deep pond, in their hands.
They got the whole pond, in their hands.
They got the whole pond in their hands.

They got the otters and the fishes, in their ponds (etc refrain.)

They got the muskrats and the turtles, in their ponds (etc refrain.)

They got the dragonflies and crawdads in their ponds (etc refrain.)

They got the heron and the salmon, in their ponds (etc refrain.)

They got the water and the willow in their ponds (etc refrain.)

They got the watershed renewal in their ponds (etc refrain.)

They got the climate change survival in their ponds (etc refrain.)

Did I leave anything out?

 


Yesterday was a mysterious day but it started when Chris Carr posted that ‘tree-dragging’ video to the beaver management forum. I suddenly remembered that Moses had shot similar footage years ago of our father beaver, and that it used to be in the footage I used to present when I gave a talk. But over the years, what what with the documentaries and new footage it got pushed out.

Did I still have the footage?

If you had a great deal more patience I would explain that Moses shot in those early days in an ancient format that had to be converted before being used on my mac which is what I use for presentations. But there isn’t room to store past presentations on said mac so its on an external seagate hardrive. Could I find that footage in a past presentation?

Oh no I could not, not until the very last place I looked of course. And then just a sliver of it. I despaired. It as such great footage. A little dark I remember but amazing because Moses shot it directly by paying a friendly homeless man to hold the spotlight. No trail cams for Martinez beavers! I could never get it back from Moses that would be like finding a particular ant in a decades old ant colony. If I couldn’t find it it was gone forever. Leaving just a memory.

In desperation I looked again at the fragment wondering what it was and when it was shot. March 16, 2008. Damn that as a long, long time ago. For the very first time I saw and option on my mac which said “revert clip to original” and I almost laughed. I had deleted that clip many many times before Obama  was president. How could the original footage ever still be somewhere findable? Just on a lark I clicked ‘revert’ anyway.

A message came up that said the entire clip was 15 minutes and would take time to recover. Okay I agreed hopelessly, certain it could never be found.

I was wrong.

Not only was the entire clip lurking somewhere on my computer the whole time, but footage I had never even SEEN before sprung forth. That third log Dad hauls is new to me, also recovered was some family bonding footage I’ll share later. Dad was using these three logs to work on the third dam, which is also featured beautifully in the lost footage. I have zero idea how it happened, but I am grateful for the mystery and  was eager to share.

My old mac is one of the seven wonders.


A second mystery came from an invitation to participate in MVSD Moorhen Marsh’s reopening day in May. I had some hint about the event a while ago when someone from Orange county emailed to verify my contact info for the event. And then another stranger contacted me from Danville with details. Nowhere was I told to ‘save the date’ or notified about the event until yesterdays invite. This to an event barely more than a month away and falling three weeks after Earth day. The invite said that for a mere 20 dollars I could register to participate and would receive a tent and table.Now I had already promised our friends at wildbirds unlimited that we would be at their mothers day booth that day, and I would imagine that lots of folks they wanted to invite would be similarly committed.  (like native birds, audubon and bird rescue). Obviously MVSD had hired a firm to coordinate the event that wasn’t exactly on the event circuit, so besides being very, very envious that they had event planning funds, I wondered why they hadn’t asked earlier? As a woman who for the last 11 years had planned beaver festivals, and for 7 years helped plan earth day events, I was confused about some things.

  1. Why the late notice?
  2. How was MVSD providing tents and tables? were they renting them? And from whom?
  3. How had they secured Doug McConnell as Emcee?
  4. How could they afford to pay an event planner? And if they were paying why didn’t they know about likely participant scheduling constraints?

Being as it takes me almost an entire year to plan the festival, and has always taken 3-4 months to contact and secure exhibits for the event I’m understandably curious.

You mean there are people you can PAY to do this?


International beaver day did not disappoint. It produced an excellent article from Wildlife Defenders, some amazing video and one classically civic story that will reminds us all of our humble beginnings. Let’s start with the fun stuff for a change and end with the call to action.

Coexisting with Beavers

Today is International Beaver Day, so let’s celebrate my favorite ecosystem engineer and the ways that Defenders helps people coexist with beaver.

First, Why Beaver?

 

Beavers are an important part of a healthy wetland and forest ecosystem. Beaver cut down trees and shrubs, eat wetland plants, and build amazing dams and lodges. These activities raise water levels, slow water speed, and change water direction, creating a dynamic wetland complex. In doing so, they can increase a wetland’s area, biodiversity, and water quality, as well as maintain more stable water temperatures.

Isn’t that an amazing photo? Yesterday I looked at with adoring eyes and thought it probably wasn’t in a natural setting because the water under mom looks very shallow. It’s unlikely a beaver would put herself in such inescapable conditions if there were another option. I looked up the photo credit (Chris Canipe)  and found this video of beaver relocation which me smile very much,


So cute going to their new home, which means my theory about an ‘unnatural setting’ is likely correct. It’s a great article though so lets take in some more.

Beaver are an important ecosystem engineer and the habitats they create benefit many native species. In the west, for example, 90% of species are dependent on wetlands, such as those created by beaver, at some point during their lives. In beaver ponds, freshwater fish can find more food or a larger variety of food. They can also spend the winter in the deepest parts of a pond. The shallow pond areas are great for young fish to find food and shelter while they grow. Migratory birds can use beaver ponds as “stepping stones” while they migrate to and from summer breeding grounds. Each pond can also support several different kinds of birds with the large variety of habitats created by damming, flooding, and tree felling. In spring, beaver ponds are a nightclub for amphibians, whose eggs and young tadpoles like the warmer water temperatures and shelter provided by vegetation near the shores.

Beaver are so important and have so many benefits for other species, including many species that are now imperiled, that Defenders works to restore them to places where they will create and enhance habitat for all the other critters we also care about. In the Rocky Mountains, boreal toad and native cutthroat trout are some examples of the imperiled species benefiting from our beaver restoration projects.

Yes they are,  And given that fact and the fact that the title of this article is “COEXISTING WITH BEAVER” it would be a mistake to focus on relocation of the animals wouldn’t it? Even with live trapping instead of killing?

It’s not easy being a beaver in some places. In urban areas, such as cities or towns, beavers sometimes cause conflict by building dams which cause unwanted flooding, or by taking down charismatic trees which people value. In many cases these “nuisance” beavers are killed because of their actions, but sometimes simple tools can be used to prevent these conflicts, create more acceptance of their presence by people, and keep beaver where they are. For example, to prevent beaver from felling trees they can be wrapped in fencing or painted with a mix of sand and paint. Beaver, just like us, don’t like the “gritty” feeling of sand when chewing. To minimize flooding, flow-devices can be installed which limit the water level of beaver ponds by using a combination of pipes and fencing.

 

Oh alright then. I’m a very picky beaver consumer. But I do like happy endings and stories of beaver successes. Go read the entire article if you need more good cheer and I’m going to save one treat for last. Next up is a variation of the story we’ve all come to know and hate – this time in Schenectady NY.

Schenectady officials decide to trap beavers after Woodlawn Preserve flooding

Problems have steadily mounted over the past half-decade as beavers have set up stakes, including blockage of a drain pipe that ran underneath the railroad. City workers were being deployed nearly every other week to clean out the culvert. A series of beaver-built dams also led to elevated water levels in the basin.

Stakeholders met with beaver consultants, who recommended a trapping company.“

Trails were so flooded, people couldn’t fish,” said Janet Chen, president of the nonprofit Friends of the Woodlawn Preserve.

Oh no! You mean there as so dam much nature in your nature park that it is inconvenient to exploit it? Gosh, no wonder you called in the Friends Enemies of Woodlawn preserve use. Gee I wonder what the trapping company will suggest?

“We observed a very high amount of beaver activity in the preserve,” said City Engineer Chris Wallin. “It was determined we needed to trap the beavers.”

While the 135-acre site serves as a nature preserve — part of the Albany Pine Bush ecosystem — the site has more practical roots as a retention pond first constructed in the 1950s to alleviate flooding in the city’s Woodlawn neighborhood.

You know how it is. We never intended this park to have nature IN it. Just to provide somewhere for the water to runoff when it floods. Beavers are icky, and never mind that it’s spring and the family is having babies.

Trapping beavers is rare and largely ineffective, said Sharon T. Brown, a biologist and director of the Dolgeville-based non-profit Beavers: Wetlands & Wildlife (BWW).

I’m sure that’s a typo or miscommunication. She didn’t mean trapping is rare right?

“It’s often counterproductive, and will create a vacancy,” Brown said. “It’ll probably be re-settled unless they want a cycle of trapping over and over again.”

Water devices like the “Beaver Deceiver” — mesh enclosures paired with a series of pipes running under or through dams — are a better way to prevent flooding and avoid harming the creatures, Brown said.

“There’s no reason not to consider these.”

Good job Sharon, and congratulations to the reporter for getting her input. There’s no reason NOT to consider nonlethal solutions, is there? Oh yes there is! Beavers are icky! And we’re the enemies of the preserve! Just look at our outfits! Shhh wait, this is my favorite part!

Friends said the device was cost-prohibitive. Chen said the beavers haven’t historically served as a public draw to visit the site.

“People to go to the preserve generally go to take a walk in the quiet,” she said.

That’s right. People come to a park because of the QUIET!  Like Thoreau on the famously quiet Walden pond. They don’t want some icky rodent tail-slapping in the water and disturbing their solitude. They want peace! Something tells me Ms. Chen is going to get a letter to make her own life of quiet desperation  a little more interesting in the very near future.

And besides, people never visit a park just to see beavers.

 

Okay, I promised a treat if you  were patient and here it is. Chris  Carr from the beaver management Forum shared this yesterday taken with his night camera. This is why beavers need to carry around those few extra pounds.

 


Our friends Frances Backhouse, Glynnis Hood, Mike Callahan and Jim and Judy Atkinson on CBC Radio. Well worth a listen on a Saturday morning. If this sounds familiar. you’re not crazy. It first aired last November. It as so nice, they played it twice!

Rethinking the Beaver: Why beavers and humans have to learn to get along

Four centuries of fur-trade trapping nearly wiped beavers off the North American map. Now they’re back, big time, and we’re discovering that sharing the landscape with such tenacious ecosystem engineers isn’t always easy. We’re also learning that there are compelling reasons to try to coexist with this iconic species. Contributor Frances Backhouse explores how two control freaks — humans and beavers — can get along.

I especially love the discussion of the blackfoot mythology. It’s delightful to hear it explained by Eldon:

Eldon Yellowhorn  is a professor at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, where he teaches in the Department of First Nations Studies and the Department of Archaeology. He is from the Piikani Nation in southern Alberta.

And of course our good friends Jim and Judy Atkinson! Listening to her talk about the community response to the beavers is like looking through our scrapbook. I especially love listening to her discuss vocalization of the young. But beavers aren’t just reruns, there are also new reports about their glorious benefits. This time from Planet magazine.

BUSY BEAVERS

Beavers in Washington state are being relocated to areas where they will make a positive impact on ecosystems.

Projects to relocate beavers to threatened habitats across the Pacific Northwest, such as the Methow Beaver Project, aim to restore and make such areas more resilient. New research indicates beavers and their dams may be a natural check against some impacts of climate change.

The goal of the Methow Beaver Project is to relocate beavers causing problems on private land in urban and suburban areas to the Methow Valley of Washington State, located along the eastern side of the North Cascades. Here, their architectural tendencies can be put to work. Beavers cause headaches by plugging road culverts, cutting down trees and flooding commercial orchards. A small number of beavers behind such problems are trapped, brought to the Winthrop National Hatchery, tagged, weighed, photographed and then wait there to be relocated.

More robustly kind things to say about the Methow project.  This one especially warming because of the attention to detail about the busy beavers themselves. I especially liked this:

“The beavers are very easy to work with,” said Nelson. “They are very docile, it’s like working with a dog or a cat. They all have personalities. Some of them will huddle in their lodges in the hatchery with their eyes closed like, ‘this is a horrible thing, it will all go away soon.’ And then some will just swim with great confidence like [they] own the place.”

One memorable beaver that Nelson encountered was dubbed “Half-Tail Dale” by the team. He came into the hatchery with half of his tail and one of his back feet missing.

“What a survivor, you know? He was a hearty fellow. We had great appreciation for him,” said Nelson.

Half-tail Dale! I sometimes get weary of the catching and caging of beavers in concrete, but this account observing individual personalities makes me quite a bit happier. I seem to remember a very famously scarred beaver tail that basically started this website.


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