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

Month: November 2020


So yesterday’s planning meeting was excellent, and I’m still a little shell shocked.  At the last moment Joe Wheaton realized his mountain time lunch wouldn’t work with our pacific time meeting and couldn’t attend. I was too busy being stunned that people were there and committed to the idea to really notice much. Folks wanted this to happen. They wanted to be part of the planning and execution. Emily suggested making space for her students “lightening presentations” which was an idea that I love. People agreed that two half days was probably the best and agency folks steered us away from weekends because they thought it would be better attended during the week. So two half days in April seem to be the consensus, although people are still up in the air about whether its a summit, a forum or a colloquium.

It’s really going to happen. I keep pinching myself.

Now you might think, after such an idyllic and momentous meeting where so many smart people demonstrated their passion for helping people understand the very good things people do, you would think a day like that means the world is changing. And that people everywhere are getting smarter about beavers and the gifts they bring.

But you’d be wrong.

Take this article from Vancouver Island listing the amazing things volunteers can do to help wetlands.

Help protect local wetlands: Make a difference for today … and tomorrow

Wetlands are an incredibly important ecosystem to our planet. They’re home to numerous species of flora and fauna, and with 80 per cent of coastal wetlands altered or destroyed, conserving them is critical.

Recognizing the significance of these wetlands, specifically when it comes to waterfowl, Oceanside Ducks Unlimited works to conserve and protect these vital areas – and they need your help!

Locally, conservation programs are geared specifically around eight wetlands here in our own backyard, such as the Nanoose wetland, where volunteers removed invasive species such as yellow flag iris and removed beaver dam debris to allow water flow through the control structure.

So the article is boasting the volunteer group like;s wetlands SO MUCH that they ripped out a beaver dam because it was a bunch of debris – you know, sticks and mud – just blocking the water. Now that its gone the water can flow freely.

That hurts my whole brain. Protecting wetlands from beavers. Who knew?

How this article from North Dakota lamenting the efforts made to recover the beaver population after the fur trade.

November 24, 2020 — The most important animal in North America in the 1700s was not the mighty grizzly bear, nor was it the stampeding buffalo. Instead, the most-important animal in colonial America was the lowly beaver.

Laws of Dakota Territory in 1887 prohibited killing or trapping beavers because cattle ranchers wanted beavers to make dams on streams as convenient watering places for cattle, saving stockmen the expense of building dams. The protection continued after North Dakota became a state two years later. Violators of the state game laws were subject to a one-hundred-dollar fine and imprisonment.

Well that starts off good. Stopping trapping before the end of the century to leave water on the land for cattle. How long did that last?

Unfortunately, protection of beavers worked too well and beavers proliferated, becoming a serious “pest in the Missouri Valley.” It became a choice … having beavers or having trees along waterways. Farmers became furious when beavers chewed-down groves of trees and beaver-dams flooded fields in the bottomlands. They demanded that lawmakers change beaver protection laws. And stockmen found windmill pumps to be more reliable than beaver-ponds, especially considering that cattle would sometimes drown amid beaver-dam debris.

Accordingly, on this date in 1916, the Bismarck Tribune reported on efforts to control the beaver population. The state Game and Fish Commission hired professional trappers to eradicate these so-called “evil … varmints along the Missouri Slope and allowed additional trappers to buy licenses to harvest beaver pelts.

Wow. So in 29 years beavers were demoted from valuable savers of water to evil varmints. Gosh, As rotten as that is it’s still better than California, where the brief beaver killing moratorium only lasted 15 years.

In South Carolina even the wildlife photographers complaIn about them.

Tom Poland: Nature’s engineers

Yes, it’s hard to sneak up on these secretive creatures, but evidence of their presence is irrefutable and to many landowners highly annoying. .But? Is it all that bad? Do beavers provide environmental benefits? Read on.

Okay, so beavers really do good things for the environment. Their dams store water that proves handy during droughts. Beaver dams’ freshwater wetlands provide happy-home habitat for birds, amphibians, and other animals. Their dams help with water quality and groundwater recharge. But this coin has two sides.

Landowners, got beavers on your property? Want to be busy as a beaver? Try to get rid of them but check with your Department of Natural Resources first. Meanwhile, beavers are busy as, well beavers. It’s a lot of work to keep a lodge/dam in top condition. And then there’s the family side of things. Beavers have a litter of kits in late spring and early summer. After spending two years with their parents, they set out to — you guessed it — build dams and lodges of their own. You may get rid of your beavers, but leave it to beavers, the new kits on the block, to come your way yet again, and the cycle goes on anew.

i guess that’s the nicest article of the three but it’s not exactly a loveletter. He says beavers are akin to rats an never let themselves be photographed. Hmm okay.

Obviously our work here is not yet done.


Today is the day when people get together to talk about a beaver summit for California.  Excited doesn’t begin to  jydrolodescribe how I’m feeling. So I’ll just march on and tell you its ALSO the day that retired USFS hydrologist Suzanne Fouty will be on Jefferson Public Radio talking about beavers. I had a great chat with Suzanne and she was hopping mad about the decision by ODFW. I’m sure she’ll be amazing to listen too. Tune in at 8:00 am PST to listen live, and I’ll post the link tomorrow.

Tue 8 AM | Beaver State Nixes Additional Protections For Beavers

Oregon is The Beaver State, but it is not officially giving any further protection to its namesake animal. The state Fish and Wildlife Commission just voted against ending beaver trapping and hunting on federal lands in the state.

It was a second attempt by the Center for Biological Diversity to add protections for beavers, which were trapped and hunted nearly to extinction in the 19th century.

Quinn Read is Oregon Policy Director at CBD; Suzanne Fouty is a hydrologist who has studied beavers’ effects on streams. They join us with details of the effort and its disposition.

Once upon a time oregon had the crazy policy of regarding beavers as protected furbearers on public lands and classifying them as predators on private lands so they could be killed without a permit. Now its just all killing all the time. There’s lots to talk about. I’m glad it’s on at 8 am. Prime time in the radio world.

But hey, at least we have a president. And that’s feels pretty dam good.

 


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I had a very interesting conversation with Joe Wheaton about the California beaver summit idea.

He has done so many virtual trainings with so many people all over the world for so long that he is uniquely qualified to give advice. So I was grateful for his thoughts. One of the things I said about the NM conference was that the organizers told me it had been a year in the planning. I was a little worried about their timeline and whether we could pull everything together so quickly to make the conference happen in spring.

That’s when Dr. Wheaton said the most shocking, and comforting thing that filled me with relief.

He basically said that “planning meetings” never get things done anyway. Imagine that!  People who are driven and committed get things done. And you don’t need many of them to make something like this happen. Planning meetings actually are far more likely to slow and undo things.

For a long time afterwards my mind was completely blown.

You see I’ve organized the two events I’ve been involved with for years are the John Muir birthday Earth Day and the beaver festival.  Now Earth day is a huge event that requires huge resources and meets for four months every week to organize. Their event had the entire national park service to set up and coordinate and hundreds of ranger man power on the actual day. My job was always the stage planning and arranging musicians which required contacting musicians, lining up a schedule and getting them organized. More than once I’d make a plan and some other member would change it or add a children’s performance or treasure hunt to the schedule throwing everything into chaos until I sorted it out again.

This was planned completely opposite to the beaver festival. Which takes a mountain of work and that I mostly do alone calling, cajoling, strong-arming and emailing people into collaboration. I have learned to have one ‘planning meeting’ in where I let the team say what they want to change or contribute and I endeavor to make that happen, but mostly it happens alone. In my head. On my computer. On my phone. On my spread sheet. By the time the actual day rolls around I am usually relieved because it is no longer my job. It’s everyone’s job.

When I compare the festival to earth day planning I would always feel so guilty. Like I had been doing it wrong. And because I always assume I’m doing it wrong I would feel like I didn’t collaborate enough, or was too stubborn and not flexible enough. Like it was a failing on my part to not understand that a committee of vaguely committed participants repeating the same things over and over again and throwing wheel wrenches into schedules was the way it was SUPPOSED to go.

Joe said no.

He said big planning meetings can actually make things worse. It was good to get their input and make them feel heard and then just DO it. Smart people don’t want to give up an hour of their week for four months just to make something happen. A few committed individuals was the key. And even though he never said this, I heard “THANK GOD! You’ve been doing this right!”

So that means maybe the California beaver summit can happen as planned! And maybe I can stop feeling guilty for doing the festival wrong. And maybe Stanford just did a study that said that meetings actually never make things happen anyway. At least that’s what I heard on Wait Wait don’t tell me.

Now this is what we need to be worried about.


It’s getting colder and beavers are busy all over trying to keep up with their demanding lives and jobs. We are starting to see more and more articles like this one from Alberta Canada.

Busy beavers chew down trees in Weaselhead Flats for new dam, winter prep

It’s an especially busy time to be a beaver in Weaselhead Flats. So busy, in fact, that trail enthusiasts who have recently visited the area might have noticed that many trees have been chewed to the ground, and water in the park’s popular beaver pond is shallower.

According to Lisa Dahlseide, a naturalist with the Weaselhead/Glenmore Park Preservation Society, this is because the beavers-in-residence are hard at work to prepare food storage for winter — and have built themselves a brand new dam.

It led to the need for some at-home repairs, she said.

“[The new dam] altered the water levels quite a lot in the beaver pond,” Dahlseide said Tuesday on the Calgary Eyeopener.

“And so, they’re also doing some renovations on their lodges as a result of that … [and using] a little bit of extra trees for those two construction projects.”

There is lots to be done in the winter. Keeping ponds deep enough to avoid a solid freeze requires adjustments. And stocking the larder is a mountain of work, especially when you have teenagers and kits and yourselves to feed for four months. How do beavers do it? It’s hard enough on us to limit our shopping to once a week during the pandemic. We’re always running out of something we wish we had like cilantro or green onions and wishing we could sneak to the store and get some more. Beavers make it an entire winter without going the store.

Beavers have their benefits.

For example, their dams, which are built to provide a habitat and protection for their young, also create ponds and wetlands that provide habitats for wildlife, and water moving through them is purified.

“At the Weaselhead Preservation Society, we honour the beaver. We want to promote coexistence with them, because we recognize that they are a very critical keystone species,” Dahlseide said. 

“Without them, we don’t have that wetland, and the wetland is what provides an ecological service to humans. And especially in that area, that wetland there is filtering and cleaning the water very close to the ring road.”

That’s a nice start of the list of ways those beavers are helping you. Dahlseide isn’t burdened overmuch with beaver ecology knowledge, she says they are crepuscular and thinks their are 5 families living in the little park so we’ll just leave that for now an say, thank goodness for the handful of Canadians who appreciate beavers.

This from Valemont B.C., about 500 miles northeast of our friends in Point Moody. Not much of an article but a dam pretty photo shoot.

Busy beavers on Dominion Creek walking trail

The Dominion Creek walking trail is not passable due to a large beaver dam. The dam spans both the creek and the path creating a pond on the other side. There is evidence of busy beaver construction on the banks as well.

Isn’t it beautiful to see what beavers do in the winter? I never tire of looking at it, And our Saskatchewan friend Mike Digout’s movie of the beaver breaking through ice hit 11.1 million views this week, which is probably never gonna stop surprising him. I’m just glad so many people have a single moment where they enjoy beavers instead of killing them.

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You’ve heard of penis envy? Freud said it was real and apparently we still suffer from it. But BEAVER – envy is a thing too.  It’s getting especially serious in California, I can tell you.

We are headed for some happy beaver news, I can just feel it. Seems like whenever the news cycle starts to get bored with its usual topics of politics or covid, it entertains itself by writing about beavers. Don’t believe me?

SLO Beaver Brigade Sets the Stage for Academic Research

SAN LUIS OBISPO — Beaver Believers easily find each other in a national network of land managers, academic researchers, and community volunteers who value the role of beavers in our river ecosystems.

SLO Beaver Brigade is the catalyst that initiated a public discussion in San Luis Obispo County on the merits of beaver-made hydrologic conservation. The group formed in 2020 with a philosophy of collaboration, reverence for nature and biodiversity, and community service with a mission to raise awareness around beavers in SLO county and to educate communities on the benefits beavers provide — fire-resistance, drought-resistance, flood-resistance, and maintenance of riparian habitat for a host of other plant, animal, insect, and aquatic species.

Our friends at SLO are rapidly becoming the new movers and shakers in the beaver world. I say wonderful! Because there are still plenty in the area that aren’t sure beavers are native.

The 2020 Biodiversity First! Research Grant: “Beavers, Climate Change, and Ecosystem Resilience” will result in the first peer-reviewed study of beaver habitat in San Luis Obispo County and will be shared online and at academic conferences in 2021 and beyond.

The Brigade has inspired two new regional activist citizen groups that adopted the same moniker, Santa Barbara Beaver Brigade and Ojai Beaver Brigade. SLO Brigade members Kate Montgomery and Fred Frank organized major clean-ups of abandoned homeless camps along the Salinas River with volunteers who removed tons of litter from the riverbank.

Biodiversity First! is a sponsor for the Beaver Brigade’s educational activities. Ecologistics is SLO Beaver Brigade’s fiscal sponsor. Donations can be made at www.slobeaverbrigade.com. For more information, email Audrey Taub at slobeaverbrigade@gmail.com, visit online www.emilyfairfaxscience.com, and @slobeaverbrigade on Instagram.

Boom! A fiscal sponsor!  A research grant! And a team of experts! Emily Fairfax is going to do research at SLO and move the beaver conversation even further. We are all lucky,

I was especially happy to see this recently from Wyoming Game and Fish:

Living with beavers – a quick guide

There are many solutions that can mitigate landowner concerns while also allowing beavers to provide their beneficial ecological services. Below are some common concerns about beavers and recommended options for landowners: 

Live trapping is difficult, time-consuming, and often proves ineffective as a long-term solution for beaver-related issues. If they establish in a location once, that means it’s good beaver habitat and even if you remove one beaver, more will find that good habitat in the future. When possible, it is best to find ways to live with beaver, while mitigating potential conflicts, as outlined above.

Seriously? This is what the Game an Fish Department has to say about beavers in WYOMING? But in fricken California we can barely get them to admit they’re native? Now I’m jealous. Soo jealous. It’s not fair! Why can’t we have nice things?

Well if you’re mood needs lifting or beaver cheering, you might be just in time to join our friends in Idaho for the Beaver Dam Jam online. Go see the wonderful things Mike Settell and his team are doing in Idaho.

Topic: BeaverDamJam-Idaho-Home Edition

Time: Nov 21, 2020 03:50 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting

https://zoom.us/j/92703691020

 

Meeting ID: 927 0369 1020

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