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

Month: December 2025


If you were awakened last night by a whirring noise it was the inevitable sound of R. Grace Morgan turning over and over in her grave at this report from the CBC. The headline alone has left me in a horrified state of shock from slapping my own forehead so many times and with such velocity,

How the beaver is teaching Indigenous communities about ecological balance and reciprocity

Read that again out loud. And really appreciate the arrogance. Because we all know if there is ONE thing indigenous communities need more of it is government scientist teaching them about ecological balance.

You know in much the same way as Navy seals can teach orcas the value of limiting their oxygen intake to dive deeper, or French chefs cab teach Chinese peasants about the value of cooking meals quickly over with high heat to conserve fuel.

Thank goodness those beavers came along to teach the natives about balance. They were so UNbalanced before.

She says even though the relationship between the Anishinaabe and manoomin has changed since colonization, it still remains essential to understandings about themselves and their relationships to homelands.

“It makes sense that our ancestors obviously understood some of the work that beavers were doing, and saw that beavers create wetlands where then manoomin would grow,” said Garrity.

Displacement and relocation from colonization as well as major changes to the natural landscape from development has affected where manoomin is harvested.

Garrity sees the pre-colonial relationships as reciprocal.

“The beavers, the rice and the people were here existing in these changeable, dynamic ecological and cultural systems and relationships for a very long time.”

Hey, I know a funny story., Let’s imagine that there was this tribe that lived off the land and learned about it and tended it and served it for an eon in relative harmony and then this other group of rag tag ham-fisted greedy people sailed  in and took over everything and gave them alcohol and guns to shoot beavers so they could sell their fur for hats.

Then the first peoples drank the alcohol and shot each other and totally messed up their culture by killing all the beavers which ruined the fish and the water and the hunting so that there wasn’t enough of anything to go around, Meanwhile the the ragtags got rich and their children all graduated from college and came back and told them that beavers were actually GOOD and they should learn ecological balance from them!

Wouldn’t  that be HILARIOUS!!!


 

Busy As a Beaver in Sonoma Valley, for Good Reason

Our wildlife cameras at this Sonoma Valley park captured a few hardworking beavers dragging branches and twigs from land to water over the course of several nights — and even putting up with some very curious raccoons!

You might call them the ultimate preppers, storing plenty of food to last the whole winter long. A beaver family, called a colony, usually includes a mom and dad, this year’s kits and older siblings from last year. Together, they gather and stash piles of branches, twigs and leafy snacks to last through winter. While they don’t hibernate in the winter, they do like to get snuggly in their dens, snacking on their food stores and tapping into the fat reserves in their tails for energy.

All that tireless chewing and tree felling does more than feed a family. Beaver dams also help improve the habitat for many other species. Ones we’ve seen around this dam include otters, salmon, raccoons, kingfishers, western pond turtles, bobcats, deer, great blue herons, great egrets and monarch butterflies and more!



Now I’ve seen beavers building dams, and birds drinking from the dam, but what I never saw was an owl hunting on the dam! Or a fisher going over the dam. This is a fun video. It’s almost like beavers are essential players and the center of the whole ecosystem. Go figure.

Turn the volume up, it’s part of the fun.


Let’s say, (and why not?) that you are a famous political thinker and adviser living in Europe and paid tens of thousands of dollars for even twenty minutes of speaking time. And at the moment you have been reading a lot about Albert Schweitzer and thinking that what today’s politicos need more than anything else is to act like old Al and follow his example as they go about their publically significant lives.

So you sit down to put together an article on the subject and decide to post it on your substack where your many thousands of readers can best appreciate the flowing stream of your insightful thoughts. And as you put the finishing touches on it you think you should add a photo to make the piece more engaging. As this is less important than your eloquent hard work you don’t spend very much time on the selection but quickly choose a nice photo to frame the essay.

Then the article goes out.

Only now lets say that the photo you picked from google images is not, as it turns out, of Mr. Schweitzer, but is in fact a mislabled photo of, say, Adolf Hitler. It could happen. Most people have never seen either one in person. They both have eyes, and mustaches, and it’s a honest mistake. There is no one around to tell you differently and no editor  involved. You just click the send button and off it flies to the mailbox of tens of thousands of people.

Among your many erudite readers most know better, they see the photo as a simple unimportant mistake and focus on your piercing analysis and subtle turn of phrase as they share it with their friends and distant contacts. You are SO right. More politicians should act like Albert Schweitzer. The world would be a better place.

And somehow this article eventually crosses the desk of a news outlet attended by a young intern editor or random AI recirculator  who counts the number of times it has been shared and not the accuracy of the images and decides to publish it on their local online magazine or news outlet. The thousands of readers becomes millions of readers. New faces  and new bots are introduced to the complexity of your sound advice. And the sharing continues, uncorrected.

Repeating your  photo choice advising politicians to be more like Hitler.

BEAVERS & NUTRIA

This is a shocking example of a less visible  mistake that happens nearly every day and one with deadly consequences. It is no stretch of the imagination to say that beavers are the Alber Schweitzer of the animal kingdom, the accidental philanthropists that create new habitat, cleaner water and richer streams for countless ungrateful species. Whereas nutria, for whom they are  often mistaken, are considered invasives  who  function as a “negative keystone species” breeding quickly to destroy  flora and habitat  marking the surrounding landscape with its holocaust and devastation.

Even though  they might live in the same neighborhoods and appear to do similar things the two species are every bit as distinct as Al and Adolf. These mistakes could be  easily avoided. With only a little effort  it can be seen that  Nutria are quickly recognized in photos by their very prominent white whiskers and skinny rat-like tails. They also have gaping exposed nostrils with very little nose per se.

Beavers on the other hand have subtle whiskers, protruding dog-like noses  and wide flat tails. No other animal has a similar tail and if you think you see a beaver that does NOT have  a wide flat tail you probably have not, in fact, seen a beaver. The identification is sometimes complicated by the fact that adult beavers rarely show their tail while swimming, and impatient photographers might mislabel the image and quickly call it a day. But if seen on land or during a tail slap the difference will be unmistakable. And if its not unmistakable its probably not a beaver.

In the end Adolf Hitler neither looked nor behaved like Albert Schweitzer. Beavers are having a bit of a  renaissance at the moment and articles about their benefits are written nearly every day. Because so much of the world now wants more of them and less of the other, and because AI is rapidly making this problem worse at every level, we all need to get better at telling the two species apart.

Beavers do a lot for us. This is one small thing we can do for them.

The tood news is that she changed the photo and updated the article last night. I guess lots of little voices do make a difference eventually.

Editor’s note: An earlier version of this article included an image of a nutria rather than a beaver. The image has been corrected. Thanks to the readers who brought this to my attention—and to the wisdom of the crowd. Noticing, correcting, and learning together makes the work stronger and all of us better!

Cover image

Why I’m Studying Beavers for Better Politics (Seriously)

The Uckermark, just an hour or so north of Berlin, has become my quiet classroom. After eight years of watching their work unfold on what I have named (and others now call) the ‘Beaver Trail’, I am still in awe of what they accomplish with nothing more than teeth, wood, and persistence.

They fell massive trees with a precision that feels almost architectural. And I’ve become a bit obsessed—my children might say concernedly—with studying the shavings they leave behind. The brighter the orange, the more recent the bite. Iron-infused sawdust as a timestamp. Nature’s own version of forensic data.

And here’s the funny part: after all these years—after all my staring at ponds, scanning shorelines, and pausing mid-walk because something rustled—I’ve seen them only twice.

Two sightings.
Seven years.
Countless walks.

Beavers are the masters of letting their work be seen more than themselves.

Photo taken by me of one of the many dams built by local beavers.

There’s a leadership lesson in that, too.

As (political) leaders, changemakers, and citizens dreaming of better systems, we don’t always need to be visible to be impactful. We need to shape flows, repair what’s fragile, and build in ways that allow others to thrive long after we’re gone.

And no creature models this better than the beaver.

The Leadership Blueprint Hiding in a Wetland

Beavers aren’t just cute metaphors, they are strategic systems thinkers.

A few facts that feel like fiction:

    • Their teeth are bright orange because they’re coated in iron—a natural engineering marvel.
    • Their teeth never stop growing; they must use their skill or suffer the consequences.
    • They can raise local water levels by nearly two meters.
    • Their work increases biodiversity—sometimes by up to 600% for certain species groups—and the resulting wetland transformations are large enough to be visible from NASA satellite imagery.
    • They cool landscapes, store water, reduce fire risk, and capture carbon simply by following instinct.

I know that describing animals as teachers can sound like I’m anthropomorphizing them. I’m not. I’m not imagining beaver boardrooms or beavers drafting strategic plans by lantern light (though… delightful). What I am doing is using them as a lens—an opportunity for us to reflect on our own leadership through the patterns nature perfected long before humans entered the scene.

That’s the heart of biomimicry: not pretending animals are like us, but learning from the systems, adaptations, and behaviors that help them thrive.

I’ve watched these creatures reshape the Uckermark slowly, steadily, tirelessly. And through observation, awe, and a behavioral-science filter, they’ve revealed lessons about leadership today—especially political leadership—that feel increasingly urgent. It’s true that some of a beaver’s work can be destructive. I’m not dismissing those impacts, but choosing to focus on the positive lessons they offer us.

1. Beavers Don’t Fix Problems. They Redesign Systems.

Humans are wired to treat symptoms. Availability bias—the tendency to fixate on what’s most visible or recent—pushes us toward what feels most urgent rather than the core issue.
Beavers ignore symptoms entirely.

Erosion?
Flooding?
Drought?
Habitat loss?

They change the entire flow so that the old problems dissolve.

This is the lesson politics needs most:
Stop firefighting.
Start redesigning.

While complex challenges—climate, democracy, polarization—can be patched in the short term, in the long term they must be re-architected.

2. They Slow the Stream—Countering Human Cognitive Overload

The speed of modern life creates stress. The stress then accelerates us further.
It shortens time horizons.
It narrows our thinking.
It shrinks imagination.

Beavers engineer the opposite.

By building dams, they slow the stream.
Turning a rushing channel into calmer wetland pools.

In political life, where speed is worshipped, slowing can be radical. It creates space for wisdom over reaction.

Our dog, Bowie, and the work of the beavers in winter.

3. They Work in the Invisible First

We love visible progress.
Our nervous system rewards it.

But beavers do their greatest work out of sight:

    • Restore soil
    • Cool temperatures
    • Reset ecosystems

You might walk past and notice nothing—until one day everything is different.

This is how real leadership works, too. Most progress is quiet until it becomes undeniable, and it requires operational excellence and elbow grease.

4. They Act in Generations, Overcoming Present Bias

Human decision-making is dominated by short-term incentives.
Elected leaders feel this pressure acutely.

Beavers ‘reject’ short-termism. They build lodges and dams that will outlast them. Their young stay for two years to learn the craft.

Their instinct is stewardship, not spotlight.

Imagine if political systems rewarded that.

My son Otto and our dog Bowie, a few years back, enjoying the bridge made by a beaver-fallen tree on the trail.

5. They Use What They Have, Not What They Wish They Had

No ideal tree?
No problem.

They switch to smaller branches, reeds, grasses, even mud.

Or, in some cases, they simply conquer SUPER big trees—with patient perseverance. As can be seen in the photos from our trail below.

“How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time.” The beaver version, visible here.

Beavers build with whatever is available—changing material, location, scale or timeline, rather than waiting for the perfect log.

This is a deeply needed mindset in politics, where “waiting for ideal circumstances” often means “doing nothing at all.”

Constraint is not their enemy.
It is their catalyst.

A gigantic tree being steadily gnawed along our trail. You can see the path created by their tails from the water to the tree and back.

6. Their Work Expands the Pie

Scarcity mindset, a known cognitive trigger for polarisation, narrows political imagination.

Beavers do the opposite: they create abundance.

Their work invites new species, new resources, new stability.
They grow the system instead of protecting a shrinking one.

(Political) leaders should take note:
Expanding capacity is far more powerful than arguing over scarcity.

7. They Adapt Quickly and Without Ego

Change arrives every day in the wetland—storms, predators, shifting currents.

Beavers don’t resist it.
They adjust.
When the water rises or structures fail, they simply reroute flow, rebuild, or relocate without hesitation.

Human brains default to rigidity under uncertainty.
Beavers model fluidity.

Leadership today, especially in chaos, requires that same elasticity.

Springtime on the ‘Beaver Trail’ with the fallen trees.

8. They Repair Constantly—A Behavioral Model for Resilience

Every evening, they inspect their dams.

Not because they failed.
Because the world changes.

This is active resilience: the steady, ongoing work of maintenance. It is, in essence, the Switches & Dials of leadership made visible—continuous tuning instead of one heroic gesture.

Maintenance is leadership.
Beavers understand this.
We should too.

Returning to the Water’s Edge

After seven years with the Uckermark beavers, here’s what I know:

    • Leadership is less about visibility and more about slow and steady flow.
    • Systems change is slow, steady, and often invisible.
    • Abundance can be created.
    • Maintenance matters more than we admit.
    • Intergenerational thinking is not optional; it’s survival.
    • Resilience is adaptation, not certainty.
    • Effective leadership is often quiet—sometimes unseen entirely.

If you want to fall deeper into their world, I recommend Ben Goldfarb’s award-winning Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter, a book that made me appreciate these animals even more.

And here’s my call to action for all of us—(political) leaders, reformers, citizens:

Shape flows instead of patching problems.
Redesign what’s fragile.
Slow down enough to make wise decisions.
Build systems that allow others to thrive long after you’re gone.
Let your work speak louder than your presence.

In other words:

Be a bit more beaver.

Warmly,

Lisa

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