Doug from Pennsylvania sent this to me yesterday, I was thrilled to see that the beavercon 22 field trip made it into the 15 minute segment on beaver benefits in Maryland. It’s really well done and I enjoyed it immensely, but I’m still smarting with envy over the idea that state parks in the “Old Line” State get to install flow devices and parks in the ‘golden state’ just kill beavers instead.
This year as I was thinking over how to educate children at the festival I thought why just rely on exhibitors, why not enlist their parents too to deliver the message? Teaching them means they can help their child AND learn something in the process. Two birds with one stone? I thought I’d make some kind of primer or cheat sheet that they could use to ‘guide’ their child through the climate change superheroes activity, Yesterday I finished it and shared it on the Facebook beaver management forum.
All ideas usually seem equally good in my head. That’s just how I’m built. It’s only when they get out in the air and sunlight I can see which ones were clunkers and which ones chimed – If I’m lucky. I never expected the response I got for this. 144 likes and 125 people have shared it with their friends so far. (On wednesday over a 1000 if you count my personal page too.)
I guess it educated some folk.
The only one of the six I saw some confusion on was hypoheic exchange. I may tweak that wording a little. But lets just say I’m keeping it. Thanks Erika for those perfect little illustrations.
Yesterday I started gathering donations for the silent auction at the beaver festival. Leila Philip, the author of Beaverland was very generous and made sure we would have two signed copies. Just in case you need persusading here is an exerpt to whet your whistle. I’m embedding the pdf so if you use the arrows on the bar below you should be able to click through and read along. Enjoy!
Nice to see Estes Park remembering beavers fondly. Wasn’t it just a few years ago that I wrote about them ripping out a beaver dam to put in a bike trail? Now they are fondly wishing they had beavers. My how the memory hole drains.
In the time of Enos Mills, and until relatively recently, beaver were abundant in the Estes Valley, Tahosa Valley, and in many parts of North America. Locally, there were beaver dams and lodges at Lily Lake and along Fish Creek. There were also beaver colonies in Rocky Mountain National Park (RMNP), creating and maintaining habitat for many other species. A good example of a thriving beaver colony can be seen from Fish Creek Road, west of the intersection with Rockwood Lane. But now, beaver are rare in this area. What happened? Outside RMNP, trapping, grazing, logging, and human settlement took its toll on beaver populations. Inside RMNP, overgrazing by ungulates like elk, and now moose, eliminated willow habitat beavers depended on and turned the marshes into dry meadow.
Over grazing and over paving you mean. It’s like eating a box of popcorn. There’s always more where that came from and you never think a single piece might be your last. I mean you never stop to think, hey if we damage the lodge of those beavers and drive them away we might not get any more for a decade, and maybe some day we’ll miss them, or our children’s children will miss them…
Beaver are considered a “keystone species” because, without them, the ecosystem would look very different. In RMNP, for example, beaver dams created marshy areas that retained water, served as fire breaks, controlled flooding, allowed for healthy growth of willow stands, and supported many species of animals. Without the beaver, these marshy areas become dry meadows, poorly adapted to changing climate conditions. Think about recent fires threatening the Estes Valley, two of which were stopped near Bear Lake Road as they moved through Moraine Park. Dry meadow lands provide fuel to a fire compared to the marshlands that existed there in the past.
Now, in this time of increasingly common drought and fire, RMNP is working with some success to bring back beaver by fencing in areas where willow once grew – and now grows abundantly once again. The fenced areas, called exclosures, are intended to keep out the elk and moose while allowing regrowth of the willows that provide a food supply for beaver and allow them to repopulate the area.
I’m glad you making sure there’s food available for the beavers you wish would move back. It’s good to want beavers, even if it takes a while to get there. Maybe you should have a conversation with Sherri Tippie about relocating some on your doorstep?
In his time, Enos Mills, who died just over one hundred years ago on September 22, 1922, made an exhaustive study of beaver, not only here, but in many parts of this country and also Canada. Locally, he spent hundreds of hours at Lily Lake, in Moraine Park, and on his own property, near the property now owned by Mary and Sue Childers, which was recently preserved with an amended conservation easement, held by the Estes Valley Land Trust. On the Childers property, he documented beaver behavior, character, social habits, and building methods. He reported spending nights tied to the branches of a spruce tree so he could observe the beaver in their nighttime and seasonal activities. He was clearly so enamored of their industry, intelligence, skill, and teamwork, he would refer to them as “people,” their offspring as “children,” their front paws as “hands.” He published his findings in “In Beaver World,” still available in the Estes Valley Public Library.
Nice to remember the fantastic work of Mr. Mills. It makes this a fine opportunity to share this reading of our favorite beaver experts reading his extraordinarily prescient last chapter.
I have to say, this is probably the very best thing to ever come out of covid.
This is kind of a fun listen, a report from a source the hosts are completely surprised about these crazy ecosystem engineers changing the landscape. Let’s say there is more than one kind of engineer. Oysters make shellfish reefs all by themself. Okay, but I wouldn’t be as excited about going to an oyster festival. Would you?
How do you turn a barren ocean floor back into a thriving reef? In some cases, the answer lies with certain plants or animals – called ecosystem engineers – that can kick-start the healing.
In this episode of “The Conversation Weekly,” we talk to three experts about how ecosystem engineers can play a key role in restoring natural places and why the human and social sides of restoration are just as important as the science.
Thankfully, researchers, governments and everyday people around the world are putting more effort and money into conservation and restoration every year. But the task is large. How do you plant a billion trees? How do you restore thousands of square miles of wetlands? How do you turn a barren ocean floor back into a thriving reef? In some cases, the answer lies with certain plants or animals – called ecosystem engineers – that can kick-start the healing.
In this episode of “The Conversation Weekly,” we talk to three experts about how ecosystem engineers can play a key role in restoring natural places and why the human and social sides of restoration are just as important as the science.
Ecosystem engineers are plants or animals that create, modify or maintain habitats. As Joshua Larsen, an associate professor at the University of Birmingham, explains, beavers are a perfect example of an ecosystem engineer because of the dams and ponds they build.
Well okay, but beavers are better than oysters, Everyone can see that.