Home from the sierras today, where we were greeted by two jack rabbits, several robins and chickadees, dueling hummingbirds, two gray squirrels, a bunch of turkeys, two peacocks and one tick. Now just rehearsing for Wednesday and driving home .
Home from the sierras today, where we were greeted by two jack rabbits, several robins and chickadees, dueling hummingbirds, two gray squirrels, a bunch of turkeys, two peacocks and one tick. Now just rehearsing for Wednesday and driving home .
I’ve often said,, when asked whether I have good or bad luck, that I have Greek luck. And by that I mean either very very unbelievable great luck that makes everyone gasp with envy or horrible rotten very very bad luck that everyone pities. My Gods are clearly the old Gods, and I’m never surprised when they throw down a thunderbolt or some ambrosia.
Guess which one this is?
MARTINEZ, CA — Douglas Pierce, who works in Facilities Maintenance for Contra Costa County Public Works, sent this photo of a beaver he saw April 27 in Alhambra Creek near Main Street.
“I saw the beaver in the creek around 6 p.m. that night pulling this branch out to munch on it for a while,” Doug said in an email to Patch.
Hurray for Doug! And this awesome sighting! Martinez has beavers again! Well, one to be sure but ohhh my this is exciting!
I even was helped by the article because I’ve been trying to decide whether we need to do a press release about NOT having the festival this year,.
Your sighting prompted us to do some checking around, only to find out that Buster Beaver won’t be appearing on stage this year for all to see. According to Martinezbeavers.org, the 13th annual Martinez Beaver Festival has been canceled. The event usually takes place the last Saturday in June but the coronavirus public health emergency prevents large gatherings.
That could be why Buster decided to make a public appearance earlier than usual. Or maybe he was just hungry.
Thanks for the UNmention! That’s really helpful. And exactly what I would have said about the sighting hour too. 6 pm in May is early. Either that beaver is fully enjoying the quiet streets of quarantine or he’s peckish.’s ne
Or feeding someone else that got peckish. AHEM.
Yesterday I also got an email from a woman in New York who loved Ben’s book so much she was planning in rewarding herself with a trip to the FESTIVAL and was heartbroken that it was cancelled. Yes you read that right. From New York to Martinez all to see our little old festival.
In lieu of a trip she made a nice donation and we’re sending her a care package.
I was startled to see my name in Napa supervisor Brad Wagenknecht’s newsletter. We met over our beaver story and he’s been to the festival a coup[e times, so I hope he gets the chance to tune in. Click on the image to register for the zoom conference or tune in on FB.
When a huge crisis of our own making escalates to the point that we can ignore it no longer, there is only one thing to do that will allow us to avoid responsibility and resist changing our own destructive behavior. You know what it is. You must.
Blame the beaver.
This is the craziest part. Not only do beavers hasten global warming but they natives are worrying they’ll block all the salmon. Because you know how beavers do that.
Henry Horner is the president of the Tribal Council for the village of Kobuk. He’s lived in the village since the 50s, and says that he remembers beavers popping up in the region periodically, but there are considerably more now. And they can be a nuisance.
“Where we subsist for fish and stuff like that, they’ll be blocking the creeks and stuff like that,” Horner said.
“Farther up [the Kobuk] river, I see where they’ve built dams, and the salmon have to start spawning elsewhere,” Horner said.
Horner says some locals think that eliminating the beavers is a viable solution to their concerns, though he doesn’t see it as very practical.
“Some of our elders would say, ‘kill the beaver,’ and they might get the beaver,” Horner said. “But while they think they’ve got it, another one arrives.”
Really? Your elders would say that? Gee do you think its possible that tribal knowledge might have LEAP-FROGGED a generation or two? I mean I’m willing to assume your tribe has learned something about salmon the past few centuries, but maybe, if new streams are welcoming new spaces that don’t freeze its a fairly new acquaintance. Because otherwise you’d know that baby salmon need DEEP POOLS that don’t freeze so they grow up fat and happy to swim to sea and become BIG salmon. And that means beaver ponds where there’s lots of real estate and plenty to eat.
And the more babies you have the more adults you’ll be able to catch later.
But sure. The elders probably know best. Beavers are probably causing climate change. Better kill ’em all
GRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR
Well let’s leave that annoying story behind us and talk about this amazing footage which was sent yesterday to Ben Goldfarb from some friends in Lithuania. He had this to say about it.
That beavers use saltwater to disperse between river mouths, and even build dams in tidal estuaries, is something that biologists have long recognized. Veterinarians in western Washigton have treated multiple beavers for salt toxicity due to prolonged exposure to Puget Sound. I even wrote a story about this quirk of beaver behavior:
https://www.hakaimagazine.com/…/the-gnawing-question-of-sa…/
Still, it’s one thing to know that beavers turn to the ocean, and quite another to *see it.* Here’s an amazing video I received from Žavinta from Lithuania, who recently captured this delightful footage of a beaver slipping into the Baltic Sea. (Yes, I get a lot of beaver videos from strangers.) Bon voyage, my good mariner!
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Folks have called me a beaver knowledgeable town-crier and I usually know what’s going on in the beaver-verse. But I never thought I was beaver-psychic. That’s comes as a surprise. Look what’s hot in the Canadian news today.
A Beaver Dam man is in complete awe of an encounter he had with a blazing white beaver this week. Paul Mikolas says he was standing near the river by his home, in the aptly named community south of Fredericton, when an all-white beaver swam right up to him.
“Pure white,” said Mikolas. “And it was huge.”
Mikolas said the size of the animal took him by surprise, just as much as its bright white coat.
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Well I can imagine the man never saw an adult beaver before so that probably accounts for his shock at the size. But the color must have been something to see. An albino-beaver. That’s got to be rare even in Canada.
Because beavers are normally shy and wary animals, Mikolas said this white beaver’s behaviour took him by complete surprise. Once it noticed him, he said, it swam across the river, against the current, toward him.
“It came over to say ‘Hi’ basically, I guess,” said Mikolas. “I could have reached down and stroked its head if I wanted to, it was that close.
“It sat there in the water looking up at me and then it did a little spin, and gave its tail a little slap on the water and dove underwater and went downstream and disappeared. And if I didn’t have the pictures, I honestly wouldn’t have believed it happened.”
Ahh the exciting beaver encounter! With the ghost beaver! I’m so happy for him. Let’s just hope a million trappers don’t rush to this site for a chance to be the one to bag it.
Oh and another new siting today. Duncan Haley of the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research just launched his very own beaver web. Go check it out. Welcome to the ‘hood, Duncan!
All right, how about a beaver mystery this morning? It’s sunny outside and the tomatoes are all planted, so this is a great time to ponder this photo by Roland Dumas of Napa. What do you think about this mysterious spot on the beavers back?
I’ve asked around and gotten a range of answers. Cheryl doesn’t think it looks like an injury and Neither Mike Callahan or his trapper wife have ever seen anything like it. Alexa Whipple asked all the Methow folk (who have seen and caught a lot of beavers) about it and they had lots of theories but no solid guesses.
Our crew checked out your photos and we each came up with the same potential explanations that I’m sure you already have…Tumor?, Cyst?, Birthmark? Cowlick? It seems too isolated in one spot for oil spill but perhaps if he/she rubbed on someone’s vehicle oil pan in a residential area, maybe motor oil… Without intervention, it may remain a mystery.
Hmm since this is Napa I could theoretically see a beaver rubbing in a motor oil spot though probably not on his back Roland sent some more images.
Derek Gow of Scotland wonders if it might just not be a coloring trait, like that wildly unusual Pied beaver seen in Winters. That seems possible. What do you think?
Beavers. They keep you guessing! What are your ideas about this big black spot? I sure would love to know what explains it. Happy pondering.