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

Month: June 2025



The Pixar beaver movie is destined to be released in March of next year. They just aired an official clip at the animation film festival. You might remember that the story is about a young girl, Mabel, who switches bodies with a beaver in order to get the beavers to team up and stop the evil mayor from a development project that will destroy the pond and forest.

Pixar Unveils Hilarious First Footage From ‘Hoppers,’ Featuring Robotic Beavers and Jon Hamm

The first sequence showed Mabel, now a small robotic beaver, arriving in the pond. She sees another beaver, who is very laid back, and when she tries to get his attention, he just swims away. Then that same beaver is attacked by a bear. Mabel swoops in and saves the beaver from the bear. But when she does, they both seem disappointed. There are, they say, “pond rules.” The bear needs to eat, after all, and the beaver seems perfectly fine with getting eaten. It’s hilarious. At the end of the scene, the beaver looks over at the bear and says, “Do you still wanna?” And the bear says no, the moment is gone. It got weird, after all.

I can’t really decide if that’s stupid or quirky.  It makes me think that maybe the relocated beavers don’t mind so much about being snacks. Yes, it’s natural for things to get eaten in nature. But it’s also natural for things to try really really hard to NOT be eaten in nature.

I guess not Pixarnature.

The next scene shows Mabel walking around the pond with King George (Bobby Moynihan), who is, for some reason, the king of the pond. He introduces her to the pond rules and the structure of the pond, including “when you’ve got to eat, eat.” There’s a great moment when an earthworm crawls out of the ground and explains some of the rules of the pond life to Mabel. King George created a sanctuary for animals that have lost their homes. The environmental message will probably be pretty light but the subtext is there – deforestation, urbanization and global warming have driven these animals together. And at the end of the worm’s speech, a bird comes by and eats him. Again: it’s really hilarious.

Remember the voice of the mayor is Jon Hamm, of Madman fame.

The final scene – and certainly the most hilarious – involves Jon Hamm’s character Mayor Jerry. Mayor Jerry is the one that is trying to push through the urban development that will kill all the animals by the pond. We see him getting ready in his incredibly bland McMansion, which, compared to the pond world, is drab and lifeless. He sings in the shower, makes his elderly mother pancakes and makes his way to his car. And when he gets in the car, the sleepy beaver, the one that Mabel first encountered in the pond, is sitting in his passenger’s seat. He is freaked out, especially when the beaver climbs around and grabs his cell phone. The beaver tosses the cell phone into the back seat, where Mabel is sitting and she starts doing text-to-speech on his phone, telling him that he needs to end the construction project and drive to the pond. It’s so funny and weird.

As this is happening, two really interesting things are happening visually in the scene – one is that there are black birds that are starting to amass on the telephone wires that line Jerry’s street. It’s adding a sense of dread and while it wasn’t explained, they appear to be villains, or maybe emissaries of villains. And the other thing is that the way Jerry sees the beavers and the way that the beavers are presented to us, are completely different. They’re very cartoon-y and likable in the scenes where they are talking and carrying on, but to Jerry they are more “realistic” and blank-faced. It’s really something and a super-cool way of distinguishing the points-of-view of the different characters.

Very fond of this idea that beavers are seen by humans as less than they really are. Go figure.

Also, as Mabel is trying to type her directions to Jerry, King George pops out of the back seat and is trying to communicate with Jerry but of course it is all gibberish. There’s a particularly gut-busting moment where King George is offering Jerry his essential oils, which he then proceeds to rub in Jerry’s hair. The crowd at Annecy erupted with laughter. It brought the house down.

As if a beaver would EVER do that! Although I guess people believed for hundreds of years that beavers would bite off their own testicles and toss them to the hunter in order to be spared. So I guess anything is possible.

It’s also, we should note, visually striking. There are so many animals. And they’re all rendered with the most appealing design, like stuffed animals come to life. (Disney is going to sell so much plush.) Chong is the creator of “We Bare Bears,” the long-running Cartoon Network series that was based on his own webcomic, so he knows a thing or two about creating cute animals. He does it again here and the personality of all the creatures is absolutely overflowing.

Love the idea of rubbing castoreum in Jon Hamm’s hair. Come to think of it, I might have had a dream like that once.

March 2026 huh? Not that far away.


Amy sent her design for this years chalk masterpiece. 7 beavers! She has her work cut out for her this year.


It didn’t take long for Colorado to move into first place in the beaver appreciation competition. It makes sense when you think of it, with giants like Ellen Wohl in their back pocket. Remember the famous In Beaver World was written a century ago by a champion in Colorado.

Now we are all in awe.

Water Protection Department discusses beaver dams, wildfire ready watersheds and more

The Kawuneeche Valley Restoration Collaborative is a coalition that includes the National Park Service, Grand County and numerous other partners who are actively working to bring back the beavers to Kawuneeche Valley in Rocky Mountain National Park.

The valley was once a lush combination of riparian wetlands and wet meadows. However, human intervention changed this over time, chipping away at the beaver’s habitat.

According to the water protection department, the restoration collaborative has recently competed its Beaver Creek Pilot Project. 29 in-stream structures and 31 acres of exclosure fencing were installed to protect the area around Beaver Creek.

When beaver count a city counts beavers. And tracks their progress in the watershed.

The Grand County Drought Preparedness Committee has declared the county is currently under Drought Watch. According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, 51% of Grand County is currently classified as “abnormally dry” and 4% as being in “moderate drought.”

Residents are encouraged to continue to use water efficiently, such as repairing leaky faucets, taking quick showers and recycling water. Residents should prepare for below-average stream and river flows this summer.

The drought committee includes stakeholders across the county who look at environmental indicators to determine droughts levels and give recommendations for water conservation. The committee held its first meeting April 28 and will continue to meet monthly through October.

“While recent precipitation has helped slow the progression of drought, it has not been enough to lift the county out of Drought Watch,” the committee stated. “As we move into June and July, drought conditions could intensify depending on the summer monsoonal pattern.”

Any one worried about drought should be worried about beavers. You know how it is.

An important part of the water protection department’s mission is to have wildfire ready watersheds. Fires such as the East Troublesome Fire in 2020 can have catastrophic and long-lasting effects on watersheds, such as sediment runoff.

Staff are analyzing four post-fire hazards: hydrology, hydraulics, debris flow, fluvial hazard zones, sedimentation/gully erosion. Another major task to protect watersheds pre-disaster planning and mitigation activities to prevent future fire damage.

Could we please have this in California? A commission dedicated to making sure we have enough beavers in our watersheds to deal with fire and drought?

 


Robin found this yesterday. It’s a fountain at the Tokyo Disney ride called. “Tower of Terror” It’s part of the atmosphere of wealth surrounding the haunted hotel while you wait in line. “Terror, Water, and Temperance”.. . I need know rigjt now who made it and why it isn’t in my back yard.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVII

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