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

Month: November 2019


Yesterday I spent some time with the artwork of Lizzie Harper. She’s an natute artist with an uncanny ability to capture living things and spends her life documenting plants, mushrooms, fish, birds, and beetles in the UK. She lives in the heart of Wales and her illustrations grace such wonders as the  British common Wildflower Guide and a good many environmental projects.

Her work is hours and hours of sketching, then painstaking pen outline followed by glorious watercolor. And such a vibrant appreciation for her subject matter that it positively glows off the page. See what I mean.

Isn’t that amazing? She layers so much detail into her art. Don’t you wish you could just follow her around and pick up every tossed out scrap of paper and cocktail napkin  she doodles on? You know they’re amazing.

 

Of course the very sad news is that living in Wales she’s had woefully little chance to paint the most important Ecosystem Engineer of all time. What a cruel failure of the British Government not to have given her beavers to paint when she would clearly find them fascinating. She obviously hungers to illustrate the complex relationships found in wetlands.

But something tells me her luck, even in wales is, about to change. Beavers are coming. You may not have spent much time with them yet but take heart,  they’re on their way, Lizzie, And we at Worth A Dam can help. If you need any photos to work from, just ask us. Consider us on permanent stand-by.

After 12 years of living with beaver we have ever single photo you might ever need to inform your work. And beaver chewed sticks and skulls if you’re so inclined. Plus thousands of adults and children to gasp and learn or follow your talents in awe.

Call me?

 


Thanksgiving is really all about the giving isn’t it? Worth A Dam made the decision wednesday to become sponsors of the east coast first ever beaver conference BeaverCon 2020.and i was feeling a little wistful about the missing funds and this morning I got an email from chalk artist Amy Hall that her giving thanks for beavers day of Yoga at her studio went extremely well. Everyone loved the idea and the thank you gifts and  a total of 495.00 was donated to us by those very flexible beaver believers! Isn’t that amazing? What outstanding Yoga Studio that must be!

As if she hadn’t given us enough already! Thankyou AMY and everyone!

Not thankful enough? How about this. For years and years  Jon’s parents and best friend in all the world lived in Norfolk England, which is on the east side of the county.  His parents lived in Swaffham and his sister was head mistress of a convent and very successful school there, It is where we would head on our visits to the country and either begin or end our  trip staying with them. Without fail Jon’s very English parents would take us on an ‘outing’ and pub lunch. A favorite destination was Castle Rising in King’s Lynn.

One of my favorite parts of castle visits is that when you saw ‘ruins’ with crumbled stones you would see those same  broken flint stones in all the surrounding gardens of the homes clustered there. I always loved the idea that for decades that wealthy Lord of the estate stole goods or labor from the residents to fund his castle, and now their descendents were ‘stealing’ back his castle for their walkways and gardens, As the world turns.

Well guess what is moving in 11 miles from King’s Lynn?

Beavers set to return to Norfolk

Wild Ken Hill, near Heacham, has been given a licence to introduce six of the animals to an enclosed 60-acre area between the A149 and Snettisham Beach.

Announcing the move, it posted on its website: “We are absolutely delighted to announce that we have been granted a license to release six beavers into an enclosure at Wild Ken Hill. This will be the first time that beavers have existed in Norfolk for hundreds of years, and it’s a massive step towards growing the biodiversity at Wild Ken Hill.

“We discussed previously the importance of beavers as a keystone species, and how they create habitats for other species. But this announcement is also timely because of another role that beavers play as water management engineers.”

Jon’s parents are are no long living but my goodness is that a reason to visit anyway! Beavers in Norwich! After only a 500 year absence. The world truly is an amazing place. If you live long enough, you really do get to see it all.

Work is now under way on the enclosure which will house the animals at Ken Hill. The estate hopes they will be released early next year. The farm is being “re-wilded” and gradually given back to nature.

The blog says: “It no longer makes sense to us to grow crops here. “We do not want to follow the harsh modern agricultural techniques required to make a profit any more. Nor do we fancy being so reliant on the farming subsidies we receive from the EU.

“Instead, we will let this land go wild. We will let the soils recover, the natural vegetation grow, biodiversity explode once more – we will let nature return.”

What a lovely restoration plan you have offered the countryside. Beavers are going to help. Trust me, they are. You just watch and see what those beavers will do. They will make ponds and dams and canals, The wildflowers will flourish. The birds and insects and otters will return, Everything will come to life again. Jon’s parents would be so proud. No, not proud.

They would be “chuffed”.

 


Happy Thanksgiving to all our American readers, and happy Thursday to everyone else, pilgrims and natives alike. Honesty who hasn’t done a favor for someone and later regretted it? Whether it’s that roommate you let borrow your civic or the boyfriend you gave your trig notes too, we’ve all made deals we lived to regret. Take Ukraine for instance.

It’s actually kind of sweet they made an national holiday for it.

Of course just because the relatives are coming over and you’re busy basting is no reason not to complain about beavers. God knows every day is a day to complain about beavers. Right?

A busy beaver wreaks havoc in Olathe

An unwelcome guest at Olathe Community Park has done a lot of damage to trees there.

Working at night, a suspected beaver rapidly gnawed his way through several trunks, and high winds did the rest. Rather than gathering larger wood to build a dam, the animal is apparently after the tender twigs and leaves at the top of the tree and is storing them in a hidden den as food for the winter. At least three trees are down including the pictured one which represents about 15 years of growth. More than a dozen others have lost bark to the busy creature

What I particularly love about this story is the photo. Notice they put up orange caution fencing around the scene of the crime to keep the neighborhood safe. Good lord I almost expect to see a chalk outline of the tree itself. Or maybe some crime scene tape marking off the area.

Darrin Scott, parks director for the Town of Olathe, has set out a live trap in hopes of capturing and relocating the beast. As of Nov. 22, parks personnel haven’t caught the beaver, but they also haven’t seen the animal or spotted him on camera, so they’re hoping their attempts at capture have made him uncomfortable enough to leave the area.

Sure. Great idea. It’s 32 degrees this morning in Olathe and the area gets three feet of snow on average so a beaver dropped into a soon freezing home will quickly starve. But hey, it looks good in the paper so just say you’re going to “live trap” and everyone will feel better. And sure, don’t bother wire wrapping any of the remaining trees to prepare for next time, because why on earth would you waste time with actual solutions that when you can just kill the intruders?

One of my favorite modernish Thanksgiving traditions is to watch the Buffy episode about its celebration, which, if you never have, you really should before you leave this life, even if you’re not a Buffy fan. She’s in college and a angry Chumash indian and when his ghostly tribe attacks the southern California campus and a surprisingly profound discussion of what the holiday means ensues. Here’s a little taste, For clarification in these scenes the blonde tied-up fellow is  a vampire, and the woman in the front of the second clip is a 1000 year old ex-demon. Everyone is plain folk like you and me, well you anyway,



Enjoy your ritual sacrifice with pie.

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Did you enjoy that nearly two years in the sun? It seemed to go by so fast, Like the last days of summer vacation. Wasn’t it beautiful to watch the wave of beaver support cascading across the US like a standing ovation at some giant national stadium? It was good. Better than good. But it’s over.

We’ve officially lost to roadkill.

Don’t believe me? Guess who’s writing in this month’s Atlantic. And not about beavers.

How Roadkill Became an Environmental Disaster

Story by Ben Goldfarb

“Among Salvador Dalí’s many obsessions—sex, time, death, himself—one of the longest-lasting was giant anteaters. The Spanish painter began sketching the creatures around 1930, and decades later strolled the streets of Paris with a leashed live specimen. A surrealist couldn’t have chosen a more appropriate pet. Massive front claws force anteaters to walk on their knuckles, giving them the shuffling gait of a gorilla holding a fistful of steak knives. Entirely toothless, Myrmecophaga tridactyla possesses a two-foot-long tongue, an organ so prodigious that it’s anchored to the sternum and furls, Fruit Roll-Ups–style, into its owner’s tubular mouth. Anteaters use their tongue to probe anthills and termite mounds like moths at an orchid, lapping up prey with a sticky lacquer of saliva. These sieges are brief, ending when the insects flee or sting. Giant anteaters are thus rotational grazers, endlessly circuiting their bug-filled pastures. A few termites here, a few there, and by day’s end they’ve slurped down 30,000 bugs.

To wander in the 21st century, unfortunately, is to court death. The giant anteater’s range, which runs from Honduras to Argentina, is bisected by BR-262, the highway that cuts across the Brazilian state of Mato Grosso do Sul as it winds from the Bolivian border to the Atlantic Ocean. Along the way, the road knifes through two ecosystems: the Pantanal, Earth’s largest tropical wetland, and the Cerrado, the savanna that covers more than 20 percent of Brazil. Eucalyptus, iron, cattle, and cocaine pulse through this infrastructural aorta, transported in trucks against which soft-bodied, naive animals stand no chance. Researchers who have tallied BR-262’s roadkill consider the highway Brazil’s deadliest, and one of the worst in the world.”

Sniff.

These remarkable two paragraphs begin a champion 5000+ word article in this month’s Atlantic, It’s a beautiful and terrifying read and you should spend part of your holiday weekend appreciating the entire thing. But just like that the pale young man who jaunted at our festival two years ago becomes a star. The Atlantic is the Big-Leagues baby. I used to have a subscription at the office. The bright lighthouse beam that guided the way for beavers through the foggy night has suddenly turned its sweeping eye. Its now lighting the way for the next story. And the next.

We’ll always have Paris?

“giving them the shuffling gait of a gorilla holding a fistful of steak knives.”

You see it don’t you? That same heady prose turning its powerful thunderbolt Like Zeus on the cloud from one subject to the next. I’m suffused with that vague feeling of delight and resentment you have when you’re sitting up late at night smoking and watching that comic you dated in college debut on the Tonight Show. That guy once met your parents! He’s gonna be famous. Like Jerry Seinfeld and Norman Mailer famous. And you used to know him.

But he traded in beavers for Road Kill.

This is obviously a splendid section from Ben’s new book. As with Eager he is able to sell segments to magazines  to help keep the bread buttered. July of 2018 was the time Eager came out. How long away is this next tome? We don’t know. The first copies of Eager were delivered to our home for the festival and his west Coast debut. The big box sat sealed in our living room until his arrival. We were there when he and his excited wife cut open the box and got to see his hard work in book form for the first time.

It surely won’t be the last.

Congratulations Ben! Beavers are proud and not at all surprised by your success. We are grateful you told our story, and will always read your name with fondness and remember our time together. But we’ll miss you and all the dignity and attention you threw in our direction.

The Atlantic! What a Thanksgiving present for you and your parents! You deserve it, It couldn’t happen to a nicer former beaver writer.


When I was a child I had a simple puzzle that probably many children learned their Geography from. It was a map of the America and every piece was shaped like a different state. The square states like the Dakotas were the hardest to place because they had nothing unique about them to remind me where they should go. California and Nevada of course were easy. Two of my favorite pieces were Idaho and Montana because I quickly made the connection that Montana had an edge that looked like the profile of a face with a prominent nose. The face tucked right into the curve of Idaho. Its oddly how I remember their connection to this day.

This morning we have more stories from the face!

How Human-Made Beaver Dams Could Help With Habitat Restoration

University of Montana ecologists are researching human-made beaver dams as a potential habitat restoration tool. Early case studies show the dams could dull the impacts of climate change seen in rivers and streams. The U.S. Forest Service is looking to use the simple structures on new sites in the state, but first, officials want to better understand the science behind simulated rodent engineering.

Beavers aren’t called ecosystem engineers for nothing. Their dams can rebuild eroded streams and create lush wetland habitat suitable to elk and insect alike. Meanwhile, the dams create ponds that can store water longer in the face of drought.

Hey, do you know what makes really great beaver dams? BEAVERS! I know its hard but just stop killing them and they’ll take over this job for you.  Of course they won’t do the research projects to prove that what they do actually works, or publish the articles in peer reviewed journals nearly as often, but do you want to prove it works or do you want it to actually work? When it comes to building and maintaining those dams they’re a natural.

Don’t you just love how the university and forest service have to STUDY them first? To see if they;re successful? I mean we know they hold back water and restore streams but HOW much water exactly? And how restored?

Is there something we can count? We just love to count things.

Researchers say beaver complexes can provide first-rate trout habitat. But it’s unclear how well Montana’s native westslope cutthroat would navigate today’s low river flows with human-made mimics.

As for beaver ponds, their sun-drenched surfaces are warmer than rushing streams. Andrew Lahr, a Ph.D student in Eby’s lab, says that could create better habitat for invasive fish already displacing native trout.

“Here in Montana and across the western United States, we introduced eastern brook trout that have been really good invaders. They’re able to inhabit places that have become warmer — too warm for cutthroat to be.”

Lahr will track brook trout to see how analog dams affect their populations at the research areas.

That’s right. Beavers will knock those invasive trout right outta the park. Of course your average fisherman won’t care whether he caught a native or an imposter. He just wants what’s easiest and doesn’t care about  purity. That how we got into this mess.

I dare say that even though they are going to study the facts to determine if gravity still operates in this particular section of Montana they will unsurprisingly discover the very same  truth that everyone has for decades. Beavers help stream. Beavers help wildlife. Beavers help groundwater. Beavers help climate change. Beavers help drought. Beavers help birds. Beavers help insects.

But go ahead. Sure. Study it all again just to be sure.

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