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

Month: September 2023


In 15 years of beaver watching I’ve become more disillusioned about relocation. Too often it involves  risk: whether in the housing unit, without protection once released. or in the spaces their expected to settle. Does it work? Sometimes.  Is it worth it? Sometimes. Is it kinder than killing the beavers outright? Sometimes.

When I think about relocation I remember what the elves told Frodo about advice. “Advice is a dangerous gift even from the wise to the wise.”

Besides the risk there’s the futility. The landowner who wants these beavers gone will just get new ones soon. Better to fix a problem than to move it.

Wyoming Halfway House Rehabilitates Instead Of Kills Delinquent Beavers

A halfway house for delinquent beavers is under construction at the Wyoming Game and Fish facility in Cody. 

The beavers that will be temporarily housed there aren’t hardened criminals, they’re just doing the job nature intended them to do. But that work often includes knocking down shade trees around homes, building dams and sometimes plugging culverts and flooding roads. 

What makes beavers a nuisance is when their work conflicts with civilization. This new relocation facility will temporarily house them until they can be moved to more suitable neighborhoods. 

Jenny DeSarro, executive director of Wyoming Untrapped, a Jackson non-profit, said beavers provide a “huge” ecological value to Wyoming. 

“We feel like it’s a win-win for everybody when we can keep beavers on the landscape,” she said. “Beaver relocation is a better alternative to lethal removal.” 

DeSarro said beavers help replenish aquifers and create habitat for many other animals including moose, waterfowl and fish. 

Wyoming Untrapped contributed about $10,000 to the construction of the new facility. It is expected to be open for business by next spring, she said.

Yes they do all that. but they will have to do it somewhere else because Mr. Smith doesn’t want his aquifer recharged or to see more birds on his property. Beavers are only  permitted to replenish CERTAIN aquifers…Understand?

Cody Pitz is a wildlife biologist and beaver expert for the Jackson non-profit, Wyoming Wetlands. Pitz is the warden for the non-profit’s own beaver jailhouse located near Jackson. The facility opened last spring and has since provided temporary housing for about 30 beavers, he said. 

The relocation facility can hold four family groups, which can include as many as ten animals each. It’s important for the relocation process to keep the families whole as much as possible, he said. That way they tend to stay together after a suitable place for relocation is found. 

The Wyoming Wetlands facility has four 330-gallon pools of water for the beavers to use and keep cool during hot weather. Pitz said beavers don’t perspire so keeping them shaded and providing water prevents overheating. 

The facility also has steel dens for the beavers to live in and to help recapture them for relocation. 

“How it works is we take nuisance animals that would otherwise be killed and we offer to live trap them and relocate them,” he said. “We work with Wyoming Game and Fish and the Bridger-Teton National Forest to relocate them farther away from people.” 

Pitz said they are careful in selecting proper areas for relocation to avoid future conflicts. 

“We are not just deciding on our own where to relocate nuisance beavers,” he said. “We work with government agencies in deciding where they (beavers) are needed.” 

Wyoming Wetlands also works with local landscapers to obtain aspen trees to feed the captive beavers. Aspen is their favorite food, but Pitz said they also eat apples, squash, corn and potatoes. 

The non-profit contracts with local trappers who catch problem beavers in live traps. 

I’m always a little comforted by an effort to locate family groups but still…it’s hard work for the beavers. And a lot of work for the humans.

The new beaver husbandry facility in Cody is designed with three primary considerations. First is efficiency of handling with minimal stress to the animals. Second is the well-being of the animals while they are in captivity and third is ease of maintenance and cleaning. 

According to Wyoming Untrapped, the facility will include four fenced units, each consisting of a fenced concrete raceway, a feeding area and a den. A concrete den with underwater access will be constructed at the end of each raceway. The dens are lined with a removeable steel crate in order to remove beavers for transport.  

Cody is an ideal location for the facility because it’s located in an area where conflicts between beavers and people consistently occurr. It has the potential to provide a source of beavers for adjacent regions as well, according to Wyoming Untrapped. 

“The project would serve as a pilot to demonstrate the efficacy of this approach with the long-term goal of establishing other facilities in strategic locations in the state,” according to Wyoming Untrapped. 

Other partners in the $80,000 project include Wyoming Tourism for Tomorrow and Mary Rumsey. 

Every person I  know who has really researched this issue is kind of iffy on its benefit. Vanessa Petro says the relocation is more likely to be successful  when the beaver is moved within the same watershed, but how often does does that occur?

To paraphrase Tolkein: Beaver relocation is a dangerous gift even when done by the careful for the caring.


If you drove north from Minnesota about an hour you’d hit Winnipeg, which is the capitol city of Manitoba. You’d also meet some very folks that were used to living among beavers.

‘Live and let live’: Residents urged to respect nature after Seine beaver dam taken down

A Winnipeg environmental group is urging people in the Seine River area to respect wildlife after the dismantling of a beaver dam earlier this week.Barry Gibson and his wife live in a condo overlooking the Bois-des-Esprit in Royalwood, a beloved and well-used stretch along the Seine River.

Beavers removed for pretty  much no reason? That sounds just like home. I guess Canada isn’t that different after all…


Some years I have ideas for next year’s festival before this year’s festival has even happened. Some years I work hard to wait a whole month before I tell anyone my plans because I don’t want to seem too insane. This year was different. The plan came together slowly piece by piece.

First I had to test the company (which is based in Latvia) and see if they were any good. Then I had to see if I could get someone to design the image for me and then when no one did I slowly and painfully pulled one together that I’m deeply proud of. Then tried to get in touch with the company so I could be sure it would work. Then when I couldn’t reach anyone I figured how to print in layers instead of a single image so I could be sure it would work.

Last night these arrived from Latvia and I was completely gobsmacked.
There are nine pieces in all and a puzzle frame that kids will receive at the start of the activity. Each piece has animal on it that they will collect from an exhibit at the festival. For example they might collect the otter piece from the otter exhibit and the heron piece from Audubon, then go to a separate booth to lay in all the pieces and bring it back to me completed. Then they can take the puzzle with them to remember and show others.                                                                              

The pieces are well printed and fit together perfectly. They are solid feeling and not too thin. The idea for the wetland image was inspired by another piece of course without a beaver. And the beaver image was drawn by our own Amelia Hunter for a festival long ago.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And the language of “Beavers building neighborhoods” comes from my earliest days of trying to show children and adults why our beavers mattered. We had one special poster that had an otter and a muskrat and heron and a mink on it. And I would ask kids if they knew what they each were and then say beavers built the neighborhood and everything else moved in.

A simple communication of the ecosystem engineer concept. I’m actually pretty proud of that.


I can’t believe it’s a comedy. Sounds ideal to me. Except for that trapper.

Silent-Era Slapstick Revival ‘Hundreds of Beavers’ Is Dam Brilliant

This is dam good stuff.

To misquote a kernel of wisdom from Mel Brooks: tragedy is a paper cut. Comedy is when you get beaten with an inch of your life by hundreds of guys dressed in beaver costumes.

Prat-falling from one meticulously choreographed gag to the next, Hundreds of Beavers tells the  story of Jean Kayak (Ryland Brickson Cole Tews), a strapping, gloriously-bearded (and frequently drunk) applejack salesman. When pesky beavers put an end to Kayak’s cider business, the frontiersman is forced to sober up and retreat into the Midwest wilderness where he pivots to fur trapping. Will Kayak manage to outsmart his furry foes? Will he amass enough pelts to win the heart of the trader’s daughter? And what on god’s green earth is that ominous wooden fortress the beavers have been building?

Free from dialogue and riddled with long-abandoned flourishes of early 20th Century filmmaking, Hundreds of Beavers delivers on its premise and then some, delighting seasoned fans of silent-era slapstick while effortlessly indoctrinating the uninitiated without breaking a sweat. If Guy Maddin made a live-action Looney Tunes adaptation, this is probably what you’d get: a kitchen sink overflowing with metatext, physical comedy, and attention to bygone aesthetic details. Run, don’t walk: this is one of the  must-see independent cinema curios of the 2020s.

I can’t ever imagine how this is a comedy but okay. I’ll bite. Does it star our former mayor and city council? Now that would be funny!

Calling Hundreds of Beavers an “homage” or a “call-back” feels like a disservice. This isn’t some pale, cheeky imitator of Buster Keaton’s cartoon logic, but a worthy example of the sub-genre itself. The jokes are fast, furious, and damn funny (a momentum the film somehow manages to sustain for just under 110 minutes). Like all good slapstick gags, just about everything is secretly a set-up for future chicanery.  A man being pecked on the forehead by a bird is objectively funny. That same man being pecked every time he whistles is hysterical. And that man realizing he can weaponize the whistling to use the bird like a tiny little feathered weapon is absolutely genius.

Um okay if you say so. Do the beavers make the world a better place and the funny part is that nobody will let them help improve things? Yeah that would be funny.

Because Hundreds of Beavers is engaged with such a specific chapter of cinema history, the elephant in the room is obvious and dread-inducing to those aware of its impending presence. “Frontier” films, especially those comedies made during the Silent era, have a tendency to feature highly fictitious and dehumanizing depictions of   to fear. This is a tremendously silly, smart, and sublime gem of genre filmmaking. And it’s a damn good reminder that sometimes all you need to make a movie is some friends, a camera, and the willingness to freeze your toes off in a field.

And some beavers. Don’t forget the beavers.

 


Nice to see Furbearer defenders singing my song…

Wildlife advocates urge end to ‘frivolous’ beaver killings in B.C.

A group of people passionate about protecting animals is calling for an end to beaver trapping in British Columbia.  The Association for the Protection of Fur-Bearing Animals is sounding the alarm on people trapping beavers and the licensing regime of the B.C. government. 

Ahead of the 2023 trapping season, it’s asking for the province to announce protections for beavers, in an open letter. A press release by the wildlife group states: “According to government data, 1,684 beavers were killed by licensed trappers in the 2022/2023 trapping seasons. The B.C. government receives a $.46 royalty for each beaver killed, amounting to $774.64 in beaver royalties last year.”

Aaron Hofman, director of advocacy and privacy at Fur-Bearers, says it’s critical that beavers remain on the landscape to restore habitats and help mitigate future crises.  “The province needs to embrace beavers in its fight against climate change and shed an outdated worldview that views these fur-bearing animals through the commercial lens of their pelts,” says Hofman. 

Of course the numbers of beavers killed by trappers is probably small potatoes compared to the undisclosed number of beavers killed by PROGRESS. But I guess fur bearer defenders feels like it needs to start somewhere.

The group points to the ecological benefits that beavers can bring, specifically after wildfires. “As keystone species, beavers play critical roles in the ecosystem and create thriving, riparian habitats across the province. These rich wetlands store water during droughts and are resilient against forest fires,” states the release. “Beavers also increase biodiversity, minimize flood risks, increase water quality, and sequester carbon.”

Hofman says the first step is to bring an immediate end to the commercial and recreation trapping. Then, he’d like to see the promotion and support for humane methods for beaver management.

“This keeps more beavers on the land, providing cascading benefits to numerous plant and animal species and the broader ecosystem,” he says.

The letter was sent to two ministries, asking them to put an end to the ‘frivolous’ killings of beavers this winter. Glacier Media reached out to the Minister of Forests for a response to the letter and will update this story once a response is received.

They say every crisis is an opportunity and if the rash of fires across Canada this summer can help beavers I say Make it So….

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