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

Month: December 2022


This is the way the year ends
this is the way the year ends
this is the way the year ends
not with a bang but a whimper

The very end of 2022 is one of those maddening days where I have both excellent news and horrible news to report. Should I chose between or give them both? I think I’ll save the stupid faux-indiginious news about beavers destroying wildlife in the tundra with their evil dams where the young live and are ruining water quality for another day. Oh yes. It’s THAT stupid, But it’s depressingly stupid. Lets just do the good news because it’s new years eve.

There’s plenty to be happy about with this fine new movie from Carol Evans in Nevada. I like everything about this film and I know every one you share it with will like it too. It’s wonderful to see the magical things Carol’s hardwork and spirit is accomplishing even after all her decades of hard work at the BLM.


We are winding out the new year with good news. Yesterday Randi wrote back very enthusiastic about how she might be involved with the festival. Elizabeth Winstead agreed to help us out with Worth A Dam and this article was released this morning. 2022 has been a beavery year. And it’s going out with a bang.

Beavers are making a comeback in the San Francisco Bay Area

The recent discovery of two beavers sighted along Matadero Creek in Palo Alto could be a sign of a major comeback for the species in the Bay Area.

Naturalist Bill Leikam, who is the co-founder and president of the Urban Wildlife Research Project, captured trail camera footage of the semiaquatic rodents wandering along the waterway late last month, as the Mercury News first reported. He set up the cameras after he had been tipped off by a resident who claimed to have seen one while they were meditating on the side of the creek, and sure enough, there they were — a male and a female. Now, Leikam treks along the waterway twice a day to check the cameras and scour the beavers’ new home for signs of their whereabouts, finding clues in the form of paw prints in the mud and tooth marks on ash trees. He’s hopeful the pair could help reestablish the species’ population in the area. 

I hope so too. Although its hard to wish beavers a nice time in San Jose. It’s such a hard place to find a future. Promise me you’ll stay in the water guys. Never try to cross the streets okay?

Beavers are native to Northern California but were nearly hunted to extinction during the California fur rush in the 1800s, when maritime traders converged in the Bay Area and California’s Central Coast to harvest the valuable, chestnut-colored fur from the species, as well as otters, seals, mink and other mammals. Fewer than a thousand beavers were still living in the state by 1912, according to Brock Dolman and Kate Lundquist, who are co-directors of the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center’s WATER Institute and have been researching beaver restoration for the past decade.

“When you remove a keystone species like beaver, which were managing the retention of water, slowing of floods, and the preservation of wetland … that was the first step of the dehydration of the state,” Dolman told SFGATE. He thinks it’s “very likely” that beavers showing up in the South Bay are the descendants of other beavers that were relocated to the Lexington Reservoir by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife more than four decades ago. Since then, beavers have also established near Los Gatos Creek, Guadalupe River, Coyote Creek, Palo Alto, Martinez and Walnut Creek, according to observations recorded on the social media app iNaturalist, Lundquist said.

That’s not the half of it of course. We have beavers in Fairfield and beavers in Pleasant hill and beavers in Mountain house. The question is how long are they allowed to stay?

Every beaver sighted is a promising sign for the experts. Dolman and Lundquist said the animals can help recover near-extinct species like coho salmon by creating new wetland habitats and encouraging the growth of the plankton and insects they feed on. Beaver dams can also more broadly restore natural ecosystems, slowing down water flow and improving water quality by preserving sediment and nutrients in streams. Ken Paglia, a spokesperson for the California of Fish and Wildlife, said that beavers’ efforts to retain water can mitigate drought impacts, support climate change resiliency, and also potentially stop or slow the spread of wildfire moving through an area. 

“Having beaver show up in a creek where they haven’t been for a long time can be a really positive thing,” Lundquist said, adding that juvenile beavers typically have a 45% survival rate and can face a number of challenges when re-establishing in a new territory. “In these systems, we’ve seen water pooled and bank burrows for animals to hide in during high flows. That can create biodiversity oases where creatures drawn to water show up more often. More birds, mink and other species that might not otherwise be there are emerging because there’s this area being managed by beaver that attracts and supports all kinds of wildlife.”

Hooray! It’s wonderful to read such nice things about Bay Area beavers. But honestly I can’t help but feel…I’m sure after the first suffragettes were jailed and forced fed and imprisoned and starved over and over so that decades later women ACTUALLY got the vote and could talk to the press cheerfully about how great it was to vote with their husbands and brothers, Susan B. Anthony rolled one eye at the news paper and said, yeah yeah yeah. It’s great now. But bloody hard hard lonely grueling work got us here. And don’t you forget it.

Damion Ciotti, a coastal program manager for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said that beavers can also help reconnect streams to floodplains and provide a natural, alternative to habitat restoration work that would typically require heavy equipment and costly engineering. In 2018, he teamed up with the Placer Land Trust to work on a project with beavers at Doty Ravine, and said he was amazed to find that the animals swiftly expanded the habitat from a narrow stream corridor to 50 acres of floodplain. 

All we did was simply allow the beaver to start building their dams on the site,” he said. “It’s a 40 to 50 pound rodent, yet it can have a major influence on a stream system. Arguably, we end up with better projects as a result of beavers because we’re working directly with nature to design and build a habitat instead of going out and building it ourselves.” 

Very nice Damion. We are grateful every DAY for what you managed to achieve in Placer. It’s a hard place to sell beaver benefits, truly.

Not everyone is excited about beavers moving into their backyards as their populations increase. While the animals do help to manage the landscape, their presence can result in minor flooding. “Or they can chew down your favorite tree,” Lundquist said.

However, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife approved a new program earlier this year that will fund a team of five environmental scientists whose work will be focused on educating the public about beaver restoration and coming up with nonlethal strategies for people and beavers to peacefully coexist. 

“We can show people how to put in a flexible pond leveler, for instance, or wrap a wire around a tree,” Lundquist said. “This helps make sure we can keep the beaver in place but minimize the damages they may cause.”

It’s a significant step forward after years of advocacy, meetings, and “sometimes heated discussions,” Lunquist said. “This is a huge moment in California history.”

Again, I’m seeing the jailed suffragette with the feeding tube raising her eyebrow and saying HEATED DISCUSSIONS? Tell me about it.

There was a sniper behind the screen at our beaver meeting and 11 police officers lined up in front of it. I guess that was kinda heated.


Serendipity is a word that describes how new things cross your path and then turn out to be related to totally different things that you had no idea about. Yesterday I got the annual letter from the Beaver Institute about their year end achievements and it had a new beaver lodge photo that I’ve not seen before. I thought, hmm that’s interesting.

And this morning I saw an article from the Saxton Library in Pennsylvania that they were doing a reading of the new book “The Lodge that Beaver Built” So of course I rushed right out to investigate and saw that the new mystery lodge image is from that book.
Hmm I admit I was intrigued, especially when I found out that it was released in late fall and escaped my notice! Would it be full of beautiful images or misleading facts? Was it about the lodge because the author mistakenly thought that beavers live IN the dam? Was it full of images of nutria? No. it’s perfect. Except for the title which I feel really should be the POND that beaver built. But that’s just me.

Enjoy this reading from UCSLD in Oregon.

So of course I went searching for the author Randi Sonenshine and found out that she is represented by  literary agent in ORINDA. Umm. That’s awfully close to home. I’m thinking she’d love to know about the beaver festival and donate a copy or two, aren’t you?


I also noticed that she refers readers to the Beaver Institute and Beavers Wetlands and Wildlife at the end but doesn’t mention us or the festival. Because honestly, why mention a children’s program in California? I assume that’s just an unintentional oversight.


Sure Christmas comes with it’s share of good cheer and all, but nothing comes even CLOSE to this story which features the finest human profile I believe we will ever see.
I love this man with a fiery passion. I’m sure you’ll understand why. You might love him too. But step aside, because I saw him first,

Whatever else you do in the final days before 2023, WATCH THIS VIDEO!

Beavers to the rescue! Rodents aid Bragg Creek man’s landscaping project

In a near perfect marriage of headaches, Bolduc’s neighbour had an uninvited colony of beavers that he considered a nuisance and Bolduc welcomed the rodents to his side of the property line with open arms.

The beavers soon constructed a lodge that not only ensured the well never ran dry, but created a large pond in Bolduc’s backyard.

“It increased the water table by six to eight feet, solved my problem with the well, no more upset wife which is fantastic,” Bolduc told CTV News. “At the end, it was a wonderful place for the kids and I to come skating.”

It’s not just the neighbours that enjoy the new pond, so does the wildlife. Moose and bears have been spotted in the water, occasionally at the same time.

Don’t you LOVE this man? Shouldn’t he be emperor and president and King of North America forever? Or at least in charge of all the wetlands and water for the foreseeable future?

There are few things that make me want to drop everything and move to Canada. Pierre Bolduc is one of them.


What built America and can help fight climate change? Beavers, says HC prof in new book

“They shaped our country’s landscape and jump-started capitalism on this continent,” said Leila Philip, a professor of English at the College of the Holy Cross, who also teaches in the Environmental Studies Program, and author of “Beaverland: How One Weird Rodent Made America,” which went on sale earlier this month.

There are several articles about Beaverland this morning proclaiming that the rodent can “Fight climate change”.  As much as I adore beavers and boast of them constantly I freely admit that’s bunk. They can’t FIGHT climate change.  Climate change is hear to stay. Even if humans stopped burning fossil fuels today and for the rest of time there is so much carbon already in our atmosphere we can’t stop it from happening. Sequences have been set in motion that cannot be altered. With or without beavers.

However, beavers CAN help us COPE with Climate change.

Which, aptly enough, is the subject of this year’s beaver festival activity and the grant that I just turned into the Fish and Wildlife committee. They have kindly provided grants to our festival since 2010, let’s hope they continue to think beavers matter.

Beavers: Climate Superheroes

As California heats up and dries out it’s becoming even more important to find tools that can help the golden state adapt to its changing climate. Lucky for us our streams are full of climate heroes that know just what to do. Beaver dams can store water to mitigate drought and recharge the aquifer. Damp soils reduce the spread and speed of fires and provide valuable wildlife refuge during firestorm events They also act as speed bumps during flooding and make waterways more manageable and robust. This year CDFW recognized the valuable role beavers play and recommended embracing them as part of “a nature-based strategy that can aid in reducing wildfire risk, mitigating drought and combating climate change.”

Helping children understand how our climate is changing is a daunting task. As future stewards who are inheriting the world we have altered they deserve to know what they’re getting into. But they lack the sense of history to remember how things ‘used to be’ and lack the context that could allow them to see that there are more fires and more heat waves than there once were. Even the discussion of climate change is so distressing and ominous for adults it can be hard to undertake. Explaining how beavers can help allows teachers to share the bad news without overwhelming children.  The resilient story beavers encourage allows a discussion of the negative climate consequences we face while still offering rays of hope.

The ”Climate Superheroes” activity offers a concrete way to outline the problems  while tying each challenge to a corresponding strength or skill presented by beavers. Participants will be children attending the 14th annual beaver festival held on June 24, 2023 at Susana park in Martinez California.  For example, the threat of fires is helped by the saturated foliage around beaver ponds. The increase in temperatures is aided by the presence of microclimates around beaver ponds, and so on.  For this activity children will receive a bookmark describing beavers as climate superheroes on the front side. In back there will be spaces for 6 stamps that they collect from participating booths each showing a child-friendly illustration of how beavers can assist with reducing fires, floods, drought and extreme temperatures. The stamps will have been  drawn for us  by a talented character artist with a special interest in children’s art.  Children will ‘earn’ these stamps by visit corresponding booths and learning how beavers play a role in resolving the issue.

Participating groups will be designated on the map and by a sign at the booth showing the issue beavers can address. The  booth signs will be the same  engaging cartoons that show how beavers can help each issue. A child will explain (or have explained) the signs and receive a stamp showing that particular ability to add to their bookmark. When all six stamps are collected, children can return to the starting booth to receive a recognition: A Canadian nickel reminding them than beavers can help with climate “Change”. They can keep the bookmark and nickel to remember what they’ve learned and share with others. They will then be invited to take a post quiz about beavers as superheroes.

Doesn’t that sound like fun? I mean in the sense anything about climate change can be fun…The cute drawings on the stamps will be made by our beaver buddy Erika who has helped at the festival for years, and I’m expecting the message to penetrate even the most adult minds.

Well that’s the theory anyway. Now the application sits in the hands of the committee and hopefully they can can see their way towards kindly helping us again. I must admit I’m a little daunted by the approaching new year as we stagger towards January. It means I have to finally buckle down and start getting all the things together.

Believe it or not, June will be here far sooner than either of us can imagine.

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