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

Month: February 2026


This story appealed to me for so many reasons. First it’s a perfectly charming update of a beaver family in a nature reserve in England. But the mother is missing a front .leg from a fight so they call Boudica.

Beaver family creates ‘diversity’ at nature site

I was trying to think which leg it was before I saw the photo and guessed it would be worse for a beaver to loose a back leg. Because swimming is way more important than walking or carrying logs. (Especially when you have those big old teeth so close by to help.)

A growing family of beavers are helping to transform and bring “much-needed diversity” to a nature site, a wildlife charity has said.

In February 2025, eight beavers were released into Delta Pit lake, part of Rushden Lakes, Northamptonshire – the first time the rodent had been reintroduced to the county in 400 years.

The Wildlife Trust for Beds, Cambs and Northants said parents, Boudica and Alan, had welcomed two new kits in September, had felled three large trees, coppiced 30 more, and built three lodges.

Project officer Ben Casey said the beavers had made “a big difference” in changing the structure of the site to improve the habitat for a range of species.

I liked the part of the update about felling three trees and coppicing more.  It makes me giggle to imagine Martinez public works proudly exclaiming the same thing to the mayor.

The trust said the family of 10 were now “managing the wet woodland around the water, opening up the space and creating the ideal conditions for birds, bats and insects to thrive”.

Casey said: “After 18 months of challenges and setbacks leading up to our release day on 13th February 2025, the past year has been a genuine privilege to watch as the family expand, grow, and begin to change the structure of Delta Pit.

“Before the beavers were relocated from Scotland to the Nene Wetlands the wooded area around the lake was dense, difficult to access and not providing the best habitat for a range of species.

“One year on and we can confidently say they are making a big difference.”

Well it’s nice they are doing beavery things. And nice that their landlords are pleased.

The beavers live in a 17-hectare fenced enclosure, and the trust said that in areas where reserve staff had been able to access, the animals had been removing trees, coppicing others, creating channels, and bringing much needed diversity to the site.

In other areas there was “improved light penetration, nesting habitat, and insect spawning grounds”.

Their offspring have been named Willow, Pine, Juniper, Hazel, Rowan, Holly, Ash and Maple.

Alan was named after Alan Carr, who grew up in the county, and Boudica after the warrior, as it is believed she lost her leg in a fight.

Which made me think of captain Ahab on the Pequad and then made me think, could a beaver have a peg leg? Or would the wood itself be far too tempting?

“upon the English loons
she laid monie thumps
and when her legs were cuttit off
she fought upon her stumps.”



To my delight I just came across this site yesterday, its the work of one Nova Robbins-Waldstein. She’s from the same place where they make Emily Fairfaxes and that should give you a clue:

Nova is a 2nd-year M.S. Student in ENVS & Hydrologic Sciences at CU Boulder. Since 2021, she has dedicated her personal & academic life to beaver coexistence work in Colorado, from studying the hydrogeomorphological effects of beaver ponds within acid-mine drainage systems to completing the state’s first audit of beaver policy and management (Honors Thesis: “The Ecological Importance of Castor canadensis: Changing the Legal Narrative in Colorado”). Now, she uses her research to study how policy, culture, and land-use decisions shape when North American beavers (Castor canadensis) are managed as “nuisance” or welcomed as neighbors, and what that means for groundwater, wetlands, and resilient riverscapes (yes, the dam-builders really can help rivers heal when we let them!). Her ultimate goal is to bring the Beavers back home and allow them to help heal our rivers.
   
Additionally, Nova is participating in Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s (CPW) focus‑group process for the forthcoming Beaver Conservation & Management Strategy. She is also the founder of SaveTheBeavers: a research-driven initiative that aims to highlight the importance of beavers, reframe their “nuisance” narrative, and provide communities with non-lethal tools for managing beaver “issues” within Colorado. Outside of her studies, Nova enjoys snowboarding, wildcrafting, & exploring nature with her two cats (Poppi & Tommi)

Research Interests

Nova also explores related topics such as habitat fragmentation, riverscape connectivity, and the dynamics of human-wildlife relationships, with a centering emphasis on coexistence and the ecology of fear. She is also very interested in grounding her work in Relational Accountability and always bringing stakeholders into the process. 

It’s so exciting to see all the new and flowering beaver support out there. Hard to imagine that when I was trying to save our beavers in Martinez there were three sites on the entire internet about coexistence.

I’m such an old timer.


The Teaching project for this years beaver festival is finally falling into place and I thought  you want to see it all together.    The idea is to learn about all the ways that beaver works help water,

                     

I really like the little bottle totems. We filled them with beads and they look super cute. I think with some water helpers  like OAEC and CUSP  and Erika standing by to help kids make a necklace if they want it should all come together in a memorable way.

Fingers crossed.

 


Guess  what was filmed by Bill Leikam off Matadero Creek Palo Alto this week?

That’s not some scruffly .little juvenile looking around for a place to call home. That’s one grown up beaver. And judging from the damp mud on the right I think he’s already done this before. So maybe checking a scent  marking he left to see if anyone else answered him.

The beaver doesn’t take any time coming back down so I’m guessing the answer is “not yet”.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVII

DONATE

‘HOPPERS’ COUNTDOWN


Beaver Interactive: Click to view

TREE PROTECTION

BAY AREA PODCAST

Our story told around the county

LASSIE INVENTS BDA

CONTACT US

URBAN BEAVERS

LASSIE AND BEAVERS

Ten Years

The Beaver Cheat Sheet

Restoration

RANGER RICK

Ranger rick

The meeting that started it all

Past Reports

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