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

Month: April 2021


Sheri Hartstein has done it again. I suppose she’s sitting on a mountain of this kind of footage and just dropping these Easter eggs every so often. I feel like our experience watching and waiting for beavers is very very different. There are no bears in Martinez, for a start.

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International beaver day is going to be BUSY this year.

Besides the first ever California beaver summit AND the Trust’s beaver quiz help in the UK you are invited to break open a brew with some friends of beavers in Arizona that night.

Beaver & Brews Binational Bash
Wednesday, April 7th from 6p.m. to 8p.m.
                                                                      Register

This virtual gathering will feature stories from biologists, ecologists, and community scientists working directly with beavers in the San Pedro and Santa Cruz international watersheds. Tune in to learn how beavers introduced to the San Pedro River in Arizona have made their way upstream into Mexico and even walked overland to the Santa Cruz Watershed. We’ll have lots of opportunities for questions and toasts (brindes) with all our beaver friends.  

Our binational beaver believer speakers are Allison Kreis with the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, ecologists Antonio Esquer and Mario Cirett-Galan with Profauna México, biologist Carlos Valdez Coronel with Naturalia, Mike Foster with Friends of the San Pedro, and Steve Merkley with Cochise College.

This event caps off WMG’s Release the Beavers spring fundraising campaign. Help us reach our goal of raising $75,000 to support our river restoration and community conservation initiatives and ensure beavers can reclaim their spot as a keystone species in our desert rivers! All donations given by April 7th will be eligible for our matching fund. You can donate when you register for the event or contribute online here

Wow! Beers with Beavers! All the other days in april are going to be jealous of the 7th because they aren’t nearly as cool! I only know one of the speakers, Mike Foster who I’ve been exchanging beaver video and questions for a decade, but  I’m fascinated to hear the others.

And besides, who doesn’t need to have a beer with beavers at the end of a hard day?


Forrest Gump was wrong. Life is not at all like a box of chocolates.

There are great, nouget filled days to be sure with little sea salt and almond sprinkles on top. But the saying implies that even the rotten days are still sugary sweet, And that’s just not true. Life is more like an Easter basket filled with assorted chocolates and also dotted with hang grenades and root canals.

Yesterday we tasted all of them.

The final signup numbers for the conference look really good. Better than expected even, with a new registration from Kansas fish and wildlife of all places. We stand at nearly 900 registrations, and 600 of them are from the golden state, which is everything I can hope for,

But then we saw that the scrappy newly dam built by an anonymous beaver in the park behind my house had been ripped out by city staff. Totally. You can still see the footprints where they hiked down the hill to do the deed. It feels so pointless. I almost wish I didn’t care at all because then I’d never notice and feel like this,

All the wood and mud and stone gone. The crutches and booze bottle gone. All the fresh grass on the bank dying because of the missing water and their rotten feet stomping down to the bank to wield the rake. Any hope Martinez has of being in National Geographic gone – don’t ask. Sometimes I really hate city staff.

But if the beaver is feeling like sticking around he might try again. And we also got this yesterday, which is as good of good news as your heart ever wanted to hear. If you never even watch videos on this website change your policy today because this is GOOD. And it doesn’t make up for the hand grenade and the root canal but it comes really dam close.

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Bowen Island in BC would like to know where all these darned beavers come from? Obviously, they say, they weren’t here before the nineties so who brought in all these beavers?

Inquiring minds need to know. This article by Alan Whitehead of the nature club demands answers.

How long have beavers been on Bowen Island?

There were no beavers on Bowen Island / Nex̱wlélex̱m when my young family and I moved here in the early spring of 1988. Beavers first appeared, if memory serves me, in the early 1990s in the Lagoon and soon moved upstream all the way to Killarney Lake. Long-time residents told me there had been muskrats, which had been trapped out in the first half of the 20th century, but told no similar stories of beaver. Fast-forward a few decades and beavers, their dams, lodges and cut vegetation can be found in many places, especially though not exclusively in the Killarney-Terminal watershed.

There were no beavers when we got here. And the old timers who were here since the 1900’s say there were none in their lifetimes, so where how did they get here? Never mind that the fur trade wiped most of them off the face of the earth in the 1830’s and they’ve been slowly clawing their way back into existence since then. In fact Bowen Island might even have been the upper edges of the ‘fur desert’ HBC helped create to keep the nasty foreigners from settling in.

Bowen Island is a metro of Vancouver and located about 1.9 miles off the shore. Gee how long does it take a beaver to swim 1.9 miles?

The beavers’ arrival in the 1990s was on the east side of Bowen via Deep Bay. It is, therefore, very likely that they must have come from the Fraser valley lowlands, where beaver populations have been increasing over the past century as a result of the decline in trapping, construction of drainage canals, and other changing land uses. Beavers are strong swimmers. Although they live in fresh and brackish water, they are known to cross significant spans of saltwater; this happens particularly when the young adults are dispersing away from their birth habitat after their second year. Beavers have no trouble navigating the waters between the mouth of the Fraser River and Bowen Island and beyond.

A beaver has to find his own space in the world, don’t you know. You can’t just stay in your parents front yard forever.

Are the beavers now here to stay? Yes, but only in the best habitats. Judging from the large girth of some of the cedars that have been gnawed as a source of bark for food, I suspect that life is not easy for the young beavers that, during their dispersal, try out the more remote locations. In these areas, the preferred forage plants are scarce, and streams and wetlands tend to go dry during the late summer and early fall, leaving beaver dams temporarily useless. In the prime habitats, however, such as Crippen Regional Park, the new municipal park at Grafton Lake, and possibly other existing and future protected areas, beavers will likely endure thanks to the continuing abundance of year-round food and shelter habitat and a connection to Howe Sound for dispersal and recruitment of mates to maintain genetic diversity.

Gee I don’t know. You don’t have any willow on that island? Any aspen or dogwood or birch? I’m sure skunk cabbage and ferns will do in a pinch. Obviously there’s something to eat or there wouldn’t be beavers eating it.


The news world is agog with a yahoo story of a beaver at Oregon zoo trying to drag a HUGE branch into her lodge. Uh, duh? Apparently the story was such a shocker it even made the telegraph!

Oregon Zoo Beaver Tries to Drag Enormous Tree Limb Into Lodge

 

Maple the beaver, one of the Oregon Zoo’s “branch managers,” was filmed on an “aquatic woodventure” recently. The zoo released the footage on March 30.

Maple ventured through the Portland facility’s office and into a pond to collect branches, deciding to bring back a comically large one

The three-year-old North American beaver arrived at the zoo a year ago and became close friends with her fellow branch manager, Filbert, Oregon Zoo said.

I can tell you it’s plenty surprising when beavers try to bring branches to their bedrooms. Almost like they want to snack during the night! Who would have guessed?

“:Beavers are very social animals, so it’s wonderful to welcome a new member to the family,” senior North American animal keeper Julie Christie said in the statement. “Filbert and Maple are getting along really well, and it’s great for both of them to have a friend to play with.” Credit: Oregon Zoo via Storyful”

I do like seeing how they made it possible for her to climb back to bed all by herself. That’s an office space I wouldn’t mind commuting too.

Finished this yesterday, Now I’m officially ready for next week.

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