There is a charming column this morning from a NY forester who grudgingly appreciates his beaver neighbors. The author is Paul Hetzler. Thank goodness!
North Country scofflaw beavers don’t ask DEC to okay their dams
Among the myriad blessings in my life are the neighbors. In the decade I’ve lived at my current address they have come through with everything from a jump-start on a cold morning to a cup of sugar in the midst of pie-making. They’ve even delivered and stacked firewood when I was ill for an extended time.
A couple of years ago I became concerned when a new family built a house next door, just threw it together without so much as a building permit or a civil “hello.” They were hard-workers, to be sure, and could fell timber like there was no tomorrow, but were very stand-offish, and I began to eye them with suspicion. After it was brought to my attention they were beavers, we got along much better.
This population rebound is great for improved water quality and groundwater storage, healthier fisheries, habitat diversification, and more migratory waterfowl. It is not such good news when beaver engineering clashes with human engineering, as happened one morning when I found that a stream, usually directed under my dirt road, was suddenly flowing over it and washing away the roadbed at quite a clip.
Exemplars of family values, beavers are monogamous for life, which translates to maybe a 10-year marriage between first mating at two to three years and death at the ripe age of 10 to 15. This is better than the 8.2-year average length of marriage in the U.S. And both male and female beavers help raise their offspring.
Social bonds are strong, with three generations often living together. Older siblings frequently pitch in to groom or babysit the young kits. Beavers of all ages, especially yearlings and kits, have been observed engaging in play. This is one of the reasons many Native American peoples refer to beavers as “Little People,” and hold them in high esteem.
Even though they may have the moral high ground when it comes to social issues, beavers can be annoying neighbors. I had to protect the trunks of young fruit trees from beaver teeth, and “adjust” their dam so the yard did not flood. Solutions can be simple, like an “over-under” pipe that lets them build the dam as tall as they want while leaving the water level where you want it.
Accurate and amusing? I guess years of living down the street from Beavers: Wetlands and Wildlife has paid off, Paul. You have achieved a fairly rare accomplishment by reviewing beaver attributes in a new way that I actually enjoy reading. Thanks for this and the light-hearted willingness to wrap trees.
Trust me. Your new neighbors will give back, too.
This was posted on Facebook by Michael Foseberg of last night at the Platte River. We are going to be fast friends, I can tell.
There was quite a bit of nighttime activity at the beaver dam recently near the Platte River. And it’s obvious that between the river otter, mama beaver and raccoon that amazingly all make appearances in this 15 second remote video clip, that the mama beaver rules. Beaver dams don’t just hold back water, but provide travel corridors and create habitat for myriad wildlife species that rely on the beaver’s water engineering skills to survive. With the help of remote cameras and technologies developed with Jeff Dale of TRLcam.com, I am trying to document a year in the life of a beaver dam complex near the banks of the Platte River and see what we can discover as part of the ongoing work for our Platte Basin Timelapse project.