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

Month: October 2023


Do you remember that one kid in elementary school who did everything perfectly? Got straight A’s. raised their hand everytime with the right answer, had amazing homemade costumes every halloween, colored in the lines and always had the best toys with no broken parts and new batteries, the most friends and they newest clothes? Maybe your parent even said “why can’t you be more like that?” and you wondered y0urself more than once.

And then do you remember how it felt when everyone went to fifth grade camp and they fell in that puddle that soaked them in mud from head to toe and they had to go home early because they couldn’t stop crying? Well that’s how I felt when I saw this article.

Oh how the mighty have fallen.

Beaver family that moved into Seattle’s Carkeek Park may complicate salmon-spawning journey

Called by the sound of flowing water and ample trees, a family of beavers have moved into Carkeek Park, building a series of dams along the mouth of Pipers Creek.

The largest dam — which incorporates a fixed park bench and two large trees — has widened and grown to the degree that water is spilling on to a walking trail nearby. The dam, reinforced with mud and branches, also may present a challenge for chum salmon, which are set to return and spawn at any moment, said David Koon, the salmon program director at the Carkeek Watershed Community Action Project.

It’s not clear yet how the beaver dam will impact the spawn, he said, and some of that will depend on how much and when it will rain this season. Beavers build dams to create a pond where they can build a “lodge” to provide protection from predators.

Mind you. This is SEATTLE. Where NOAA fisheries is head quartered. Where Michael Pollock works. This is the smartest state about beavers in the entire universe. And he is worried about the chum.

In a natural environment — where a river flows consistently all the time — a beaver dam would be no problem for spawning salmon, he said. But Pipers Creek, surrounded by a highly urbanized and concrete-laden watershed, is no natural river.

Even without beavers, the survival rates of the salmon’s eggs are low at Carkeek Park, he said. Due to the nonporous nature of the watershed, the stream’s depth often increases and decreases rapidly before and after rain, leading the eggs often to be washed out. Plenty of other things like runoff from fertilizers, tire dust and dog poop also threaten the eggs.

While beaver dams can sometimes help salmon eggs, slowing down water and filtering silt, the ones in Carkeek Park may prevent the salmon from traveling fully upstream. If the downstream waters are high enough — which they aren’t right now — Chinook and coho salmon can jump over the dams and the chum can beat their way through the gaps, Koon said. Otherwise, the salmon will have to wait for when the water levels get high enough during active rain.

You see what I mean about knowing better. The idea is they know beaver help salmon. Just maybe not these salmon. Never mind that the creek probably wouldn’t have deep water at all if the beavers weren’t there. Never mind that it is perfectly normal for salmon to wait for storms and swim over during high rain. Never mind that waiting might even connect the, to more salmon so they can find a mate. in the first place.

Parks and Recreation intends to apply for a permit to install a device within the dam that would drop the water level, and may also implement fencing to protect trees. The beavers, which likely came over from Golden Gardens, may be relocated, she said.

Standing next to a 2-by-6-inch plank built into the largest dam, Koon estimated the dam’s length is more than 50 feet and the depth of the pooled water is at least 5 feet. Koon, who has kept an eye on the salmon at Carkeek Park for years, said he’s seen small dams at Pipers Creek likely built by young inexperienced beavers that get washed out after one big rain in the past.

“These ones are clearly experienced,” he said. “They’ve done some really good, amazing engineering.”

That’s right the novice beavers aren’t a problem for salmon because they only build  little dams and those get washed out. But these experienced beavers build 5 feet dams and that ruins everything.

Hey you know how tall the Martinez primary dam was when the city first measured it? 7 feet! And do you know what that concrete channel did to the steelhead population? NOTHING. In fact at one time our beavers had five dams. And some were big and some were little and it had nothing at all to do with their experience level.

This year, as the stream has moved and broken through some of the smaller dams, he’s seen the beavers expand and lengthen the large dam, patching up sections overnight. Koon said the two adult beavers and a “kit” or baby beaver have had additional baby beavers since moving into Carkeek.

Oh noo. You mean you have those very rare REPAIRING beavers that teach their children how to help fix and strengthen dams over time? That almost never always happens.

I have a few videos that might interest you.


See how this works? You have no need to fear the boover. Happy Halloween by the way.


Tiffany Yap, a Senior Conservation Environmental Scientist for the Center for Biologic Diversity, just published a graphic novel on P-22’s amazing life with  a cameo from a very special guest star. I thought you’d want to know,,,

Tiffany Yap is a conservation scientist based in the San Francisco Bay Area. She holds a doctorate in environmental science and engineering and has published studies in Science, EcoHealth, and other scientific journals. Her work has been featured in major news outlets, including the New York Times, LA Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and NPR.

Living in SF I’d be very surprised if she didn’t know something about our urban beavers, but she’s youngish so it might be before her time, which give me a GREAT idea for a story. Ahem…Here’s the illustrator…

Meital Smith is an illustrator and artist from Seattle, Washington. She graduated from Cornish College of the Arts with a BFA in Design in 2021 and is currently pursuing an MAT at the Rhode Island School of Design. Meital’s work has appeared in The Lily, and in 2021, she self-published her graphic novella Yesh Lanu Machaneh, which documents her community’s experiences at her beloved summer camp, Camp Miriam.

Tiffany is especially interested in wildlife corridors that allow migration from on region to another, so you can see why she fell in love with P-22’s story. Hey I know an animal that can really help maintain high quality corridors. Are you thinking what I’m thinking?

Those neglected urban streams sustain a lot of foot traffic for migrating wildlife. And give them a nice place to rest and hide out during wildfire events. Just look.

Let’s be honest, we probably all owe our survival to beavers…

You can pick up your copy of this fun read



Wishing you a tailslapping Sunday. Robin suggested I edit this to make it more accurate.


Very few beaver tidings really surprise me any more. After 16 years of following their stories I pretty much know the depth and breadth of what to expect anymore. So when I saw a blog from Northern Canada feature our art project from Earthday in 2014 I wasn’t exactly shocked, because it’s a cute photo…until I realized it actually features my living room as well!


The beaver world gathers in tiny Oregon town

“Seventy-five percent of the artificial wetland restoration projects done in America over the past thirty years have failed but when beavers do it, they do it perfectly,” says Stanley Petrowski. He lives in Canyonville, Oregon, a small town in the Klamath Mountains of southern Oregon with a population of 1,660.

Stanley and a neighbour, former logger Leonard Houston, have helped turn the town into the global locus of efforts to restore beavers to their traditional ranges in the wild. They founded the State of the Beaver conference in 2010 after attending a government agency working group where participants spent their time arguing. It’s now in its 13th year.

At that first conference, people from agencies and scientific disciplines who had never met discovered their common interest in beaver ecology. It helped contribute greatly to what some call the ‘beaver enlightenment’.

Interest in beavers has been steadily increasing over the past thirteen years due to the low-cost and extensive benefits to the environment and wildlife that they bring when planted in streams. Water storage, in these times of increasingly frequent drought, is a boon to farmers, ranchers as well as rural towns and cities. Beavers help restore anadromous fish runs and provide homes for waterfowl and aquatic creatures such as frogs and salamanders as well as drinking water for other wild creatures.

This year’s conference, the 13th, will bring together up to 300 beaver restoration advocates and rewilding activists from all over North America and Europe Nov. 13-15, 2023. The theme is “The Path Forward”, focusing on the future of beavers across the northern hemisphere and the best management strategies for both humans and beaver.

Well if my old couch had to find it’s way to one national blog I’m sure happy it showed up on this one! What a perfect way to celebrate 13 years of mind blowing beaver education!

“At no time in history has the plight of the beaver been so illuminated, authors, filmmakers, and the media have shone the international spotlight upon an unlikely hero, the humble hardworking champion of our aquatic ecosystems. Across the Northern Hemisphere beaver ecology is one of the fastest-growing fields in restoration ecology, this event highlights the actions of all whom work in this arena.”

The conference, which is organized by SURCP and sponsored by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the Maine Community Foundation, and seven other organizations dedicated to beaver restoration, is an economic boon to both the tribe and the small town.

Hundreds of scientists, activists, and lecturers spend time and money in the community. Lodging at the casino and local motels by itself brings in tens of thousands of dollars.

As well as presentations by ecologists, wildlife and fisheries biologists, and activists this year’s conference will feature a panel of representatives from eight East Coast indigenous tribes who will speak of the tradition role of beavers in their culture and about their current restoration efforts.

Leila Phillip, a professor of Environmental Studies at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, and author of Beaver Land, How One Weird Rodent Made America, will be the keynote speaker.

Well you know how serious this is because it features my living room on the main page.  Who is behind this blog I wonder. I’m not sure I know anyone from Northern Canada. Sounds like someone associated with Cows and Fish don’t you think? That’s Alberta I think…hmm

European visitors are among the participants because restoration efforts for the Eurasian Beaver, a close cousin to the North American Beaver, is a growing field in Britain, Norway, Belgium, Germany, Lithuania and Poland with some of their efforts underway at scales that are often ahead of those in the US.

Sources given include the daily yonder article I featured and shared on the beaver management facebook page as well as the nevada article I shared before that. Then it says the cover photo is from “Worth A Dam”. But just to clarify I haven’t posted that photo in years…

Or sat in that couch for years. Never underestimate the power of cute.


This amazing creation was shared yesterday on the beaver management forum. Apparently it is the “Beaver Bus” that will be touring England soon. I have never been so jealous in all my life.

Apparently it’s a refurbished horse trailer funded in part by the Lower Mill Estate in England. I assume it’s a project of the Beaver Trust but I haven’t yet confirmed that. In the meantime I’ll just share  what was said about it:

We recently welcomed @cotswoldlakestrust to the Estate to help them unveil their ‘Beaver Bus’. This converted horse box was created as an education trailer to teach the local community about beavers and a whole host of other animals that choose to call the Cotswolds home.Lower Mill Estate is proud to have contributed to the development of this fantastic educational resource.The beaver bus will be travelling around the Cotswolds at schools and events, so if you are in the area, keep an eye out and see if you can spot it!

How cool is that?

I am glowing with admiration and green with envy.

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