City of Napa, California Beavers
by Rusty Cohn
Couple of Beavers having a hug session, or maybe a little wrestling.
A very relaxed pair of Beavers
Pair of Kits
Family having dinner together
Kit hitching a ride
by Rusty Cohn
Couple of Beavers having a hug session, or maybe a little wrestling.
A very relaxed pair of Beavers
Pair of Kits
Family having dinner together
Kit hitching a ride
I guess time really does heal all wounds.
Recently I was persuaded to try and get a blurb into Diablo magazine promoting the festival so I wrote a little something up, aiming it toward an audience that had probably heard about the beavers but never followed the story. i wrote up a few pararaphs and sent it off to the editor. But not before I noticed how different it was than what I usually write.
Let me try to explain.
Back when i was fighting every day for the beavers safety I would have HATED an article like this, I think. It seems strange but in those days I had to be super polite to everyone and never risk upsetting a potential friend. I was working overtime to keep a lid on how I really felt and never show how frustrated I was. But it was very urgent and personal. I could barely stand writing anything that complained about the beavers or put the city in a positive light and made fun of the beaver bruhaha. This particular post is a favorite demonstration of how I was feeling at the time.
But now that I’m finally free to be the queen of beaver snark and say whatever I like it takes no effort at all to tell a glibber story when its called for. I dispatched this article so blithely you might have thought I worked for main street Martinez.
A decade ago Martinez found itself at the center of controversy over some furry neighbors nobody expected. A pair of beavers had moved into the creek downtown and started building a dam to raise their family. Fears that the dam would cause flooding spurred a plan to trap the critters, but residents objected – and how. Soon nearly every paper and news channel was talking about the controversy. The beaver bruhaha even made it to national news!
Defenders guessed the beavers would be harder to kill after residents threw a party for them, and in 2008 the first beaver festival was born. Over the years it has grown to be one of the biggest wildlife events in Northern California, drawing conservation and nature groups from more than 5 bay area counties. Live music, children’s activities, a silent auction and beaver tours have made this a popular favorite for nature lovers.
This year, artist Amy G Hall from Napa will be once again be sharing her talents with a 2-day chalk mural showing beavers and the wildlife they sustain in the central plaza. Exhibitors at the event include Native Bird Connections, NorCal bats, the Marine Mammal Center and the many local wildlife organizations. This year children will be invited to participate in a treasure hunt to find the “Lost Key to the Waters”.
They say when life give you lemons you should make lemonade, but when life give you beavers you should definitely celebrate with a dam good festival like this. Come see for yourself!
The editor loved it. He called back to say so and to ask if I was a writer and if I wanted to write on other topics not about beavers. Ha! He also said that he loved the photo I sent of Amy creating her mural and that he was thinking about using it on the cover.
The COVER.
He was a little worried that the photo was too grainy to work, but he was definitely interested. I was busy worrying about my upcoming chat at Safari West so I wasn’t smart enough to be worried about the phone call and we chatted like old friends. It’s always good to be worried about something else so that you don’t realize what an enormous opportunity you are being offered at the time. I find I’m way more mellow.
It would make me very happy if the festival ended up the cover of Diablo magazine. It would make sure the event was well attended, would support Amy’s hard work, would make all the other news outlets cover the story, and be good for beavers everywhere.
It would also make the mayor remember once and for all NOT to kill beavers and endear me even more to his heart. It just doesn’t get any better than that.
I just couldn’t resist.
We’ll see hat happens. Wish beavers luck tonight at Safari West. Rusty Cohn of Napa will be sharing some great photos tomorrow and Cheryl Reynolds will be generously dog-sitting in my absence,
I received the most interesting email from the forest service yesterday. Something tells me you’ll be interested too. But I’ll let you decide. Just check out that title.
North American beavers were once so plentiful in the Scott River Basin of northern California that the area was referred to as “Beaver Valley” by the first Euroamerican fur trappers who travelled there in the early 1830s. But heavy trapping of the fur-bearing rodent—one historical record reports 1,800 beavers trapped by a single man in one month in 1836 along the two forks of the Scott River—ultimately caused the species to rapidly decline in number. As beavers departed the landscape, so, too, did their trademark dams, which played a critical role in shaping the hydrology of the Scott River and its tributaries. Beaver removal, along with activities like mining, deforestation, road construction, and agriculture, have had major impacts on the Scott River Valley watershed over the past 150 years.
Fast forward more than a century, and the Scott River basin and beavers are, once again, intertwined. In 2014, the Scott River Watershed Council, an independent nonprofit organization, launched an initiative to reintroduce the benefits of beaver dams to the basin by building “beaver dam analogues,” also known as BDAs. These structures, which are made of wooden posts woven with vegetation and sediment, are strategically placed in streams to mimic the effects of natural beaver dams. The streams included in the project flow through private lands and are important habitat for federal Endangered Species Act-listed southern Oregon/northern California coast coho salmon. The council installed the BDAs with the goals of improving instream habitat for salmon, raising groundwater levels, and reducing stream channel incision.
Ohh do you hear that? That’s as near as you’re going to ever get to hearing the USDA singing our song. Savor this moment. Shh it gets better.
To date, 20 BDA structures have been installed at six sites and the council has plans for more. Beavers have been active, or have taken over maintenance, at all of the sites, and agency personnel and landowners feel that beaver populations in the Scott Valley are increasing in number.
“Most of the private landowners involved in this project are ranchers who also grow hay and who have largely positive views of beavers and beaver dams, so long as they do not interfere with irrigation infrastructure,” said Susan Charnley, a Pacific Northwest Research Station research social scientist and author of a case study on the project. “Monitoring data and interviews with stakeholders indicate that BDAs are starting to achieve their goals and are benefitting both landowners and fish.”
The case study report includes a detailed description of the pioneering restoration project – the first of its kind in California – and the experiences of partners and stakeholders involved in it – as well as a discussion of the lessons learned.
Although this watershed restoration project was the first in California, results are showing promise, and other California groups are starting to use this restoration technique. The project offers important lessons for undertaking beaver-related restoration on private lands across the west.
Read the California case study online
Tadaa!!! The Forest service is installing beaver dams and thinking they do REMARKABLE things for the watershed. And hey once humans start these dams actual beavers come and take them over! Saving water, helping salmon, preventing floods, and will you look at that, raisin the water table so all those hay farmers can water their crop!
Yesterday’s grueling job was finishing the festival map and making sure that there was room for everyone in the park. Last year we experimented with filling the outsides of the park and some exhibits were unhappy with the amount of engagement they received so this year wenre smushing everything back together to keep activity on the inside of the park.
Which means measuring with a fine tooth comb to make sure there’s room for everybody and an aisle to get in and out. Poor Jon had to run back to the park three times just to make sure the numbers were right. But in the end I was pretty grateful everyone fit and things would work. One advantage of everyone being in the interior is that everyone will have an ‘across the way neighbor’ which means that when folks finish at one booth there is another close by to visit. That should increase engagement fingers crossed. And mean that everyone isn’t too far from the artist, the music or the restrooms.
The nice thing about seeing it on paper is that you can imagine the children’s activity and how they will have to hunt down map fragments in every row to get pieces they can then reassemble at the map making station to find the lost key.
Thank goodness Erika will be helping them and tasked with the assembling. All in all it looks like a pretty active event, with 40 exhibits (f you county Amy chalking in the center). Today’s job is getting something in Diablo magazine and final touches on my presentation at Safari West. Oh, plus our labrador Kenzie has a toothache and has to go to the vet. Nothing is ever easy.
Meanwhile folks across the pond from Port Moody are still determined to be as stupid as possible.
Investigation stems from May 2 incident that turned Colquitz River ‘chocolate brown’
It remains uncertain whether a Saanich non-profit had the necessary permits to perform work responsible for a spill into a local salmon-bearing river already facing various strains.
The Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development is investigating whether the Horticultural Centre of the Pacific (HCP) had the “appropriate permits” under the Water Sustainability Act to remove a beaver dam on Thursday, May 2.
Various public and private authorities have deemed the removal of the dam responsible for triggering a spill of warm, sediment-rich water into the Colquitz River from a weir part and parcel of the HCP.
When are people going to realize that removing a beaver dam is BAD for fish? I know they have fun pretending it’s good for fish, but lots of us know better. Having the ministry of forests investigate whether they did this with the correct permits is ridiculous. Why would anyone hand out a permit for this vandalism? And even if they DID how much investigation would it take to determine whether they did or didn’t?
You and I both know that what they’re really investigating is whether to tell the truth or not about who’s to blame for this fish fiasco.
Ian Bruce, executive director of the Peninsula Streams Society, said he witnessed the river turn “chocolate brown” on Thursday, May 2. Students from Royal Oak middle school were releasing Coho fry into the river at the Wilkinson Road and Lindsay Avenue when the level of the river suddenly rose four inches in height, said Bruce, whose organization hosted the students.
“The clear, slow moving water became chocolate brown with sediment, and began rushing by,” he said. Its temperature rose from 10.8 degree Celsius to 18.5 degree Celsius, while the level of dissolved oxygen dropped by more than half, he added.
Bruce said the spill could lead to the failure of future salmon runs.
Why on earth a non-profit worth its salt wouldn’t know better than to rip out a beaver dam is beyond me. But here’s their website if you share my inclination to shame them. They look a lot like Heather Farms where folks can have weddings and audubon meetings. They probably never exhibited at a beaver festival.
Maybe that could be part of their fine?
This summer Ben Goldfarb and beavers go to Embercombe.
With Derek Gow, Ben Goldfarb and Professor Richard Brazier
A short residential course and a practical guide for those considering the reintroduction of beaver to their land.
In collaboration with University of Exeter
Embercombe is a beautiful and wilding 50 acre valley on the edge of Dartmoor. It is place to find a deep connection with nature – wild nature around us and wild nature within us. It is a place to breathe, to reconsider, to regenerate and to relearn. It is a place to get clear on what it is you have to offer the world and become passionate about who you are and what you do. It is a place to join the conversation, pick up the skills and get started.
We are joined by Derek Gow, Ben Goldfarb and Professor Richard Brazier to look at the wider implications, the challenges, the specific ecosystem benefits and the practical considerations when introducing this species back into wilding or managed habitats.
We will be exploring the current situation in Great Britain as more and more landowners introduce this species as an attempt to restore ecosystems, mitigate flooding and improve land and water quality. We will consider the lessons being learnt along the way, how we can share experience, logistics and spread positive impact. We will look at how to limit the negative impacts, and how to communicate and get involved in this important work.
We will also be considering what lessons can be learnt from the study of beavers in the United States, a country much wilder than ours, with wolves, bears, moose and many other species that have been eliminated from our native fauna. What can we learn about the role of beavers in relatively intact US ecosystems as we consider where they might fit in the restoration of ours? What are the longer term benefits for ecosystems and landowners from working alongside this species for several generations, what have been the conflicts and what measures are conservationists in the US now taking to bring back beavers into areas they have yet to colonise?
This course includes a field trip to see Beavers at Derek Gow’s farm.
I wanna go! Don’t you? A summer trip to the south of England to learn from the very best beaver minds on the planet? You have to understand that if you’re English, Dartmoor is like Yosemite and conjures up the same rugged wild images and same wistully indrawn breaths as a tale of John Muir. Jon used to camp there with his entire family and one time the huge parade of 8 hungry children ran out of food and famously had to purchase bread used to feed pigs from a nearby farmer. Embercombe is literally flanking some of the most wild land in the UK. What a wonderful place to sit by the fire and tell stories about beavers!
Of course exploration ain’t cheap. The three day course will cost you a cool 235 pounds for a shared yurt (around 300 per person), But imagine how incandescently differen’t you’ll be at the end of it.