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

BEAVERS GET ANOTHER FINE BEN-TERVIEW


Happy Labor Day. Happy September by the way. It has always been by far my favorite month. It used to be back-to-school, new notebooks, when leaves would change, acorns would drop, everyone would try and wear new sweaters before they need them in California, and my birthday looms on the horizon. I love the entire feel of September.

Perfect timing then for another big Ben-terview  and event.

Author Ben Goldfarb brings his message of beaver admiration to Northwest Passages stage

Ben Goldfarb is many things. Award-winning author. Environmentalist. Journalist. Devoted fly fisherman. What he definitely isn’t? A beaver. No matter – he’s the next best thing. A beaver’s best friend. A “Beaver Believer,” in the Cult of Beaver.

“Like most people who grew up hiking and camping and fishing and canoeing, I’ve certainly been around beavers,” Goldfarb said Tuesday. “I had a baseline appreciation for how cool they are, and how they modify the environment. But I didn’t become a true Beaver Believer, as the people in the beaver cult call ourselves, until five years ago.”

Ahh yes. He means people like US. Like anyone fool enough to read this website. Ben came to our last beaver festival at the old park in 2016, and our first festival at the new park the following year. He published his book sometime in between, famously calling me “candid” and Jon a “genial fellow” – which, to this day, when he gets crabby or tired I still remind him of, Saying helpfully, “Wow, that sure wasn’t very genial.

(It’s those kind of delicately candid observations that keep me so very popular around here, I can tell you.)

“Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter,” was released by Chelsea Green Publishing in June last year, about the same time Goldfarb and his wife Elise moved to Spokane from Connecticut.

Among its accolades, including being named one of the Washington Post 50 Notable Works of Nonfiction and Best Outdoor Book of 2018 by Outside Magazine, earlier this year it won one of the nation’s top literary prizes: The E.O. Wilson Prize for Literary Science Writing from PEN America.

It truly couldn’t happen to a better subject or a nicer guy. The beavers chose their champion, and Ben’s doing a great job.

I especially liked this exchange.

Who first realized the beavers were so important?

It goes back a long way. There were people, there’s a great book called the “The American Beaver and His Works,” written in the 1800s. There was another great book called “In Beaver World,” in 1913. It seems like every couple of generations society rediscovers just how important this creature is. I think that the thing that has catalyzed this latest round of interest in beavers is climate change. We know that the West is getting hotter and drier. As it does, our water resources are increasingly under stress. A lot of our precipitation is falling as rain rather than snow. And we’ve begun to recognize that this animal that builds thousands of little reservoirs essentially up in the high country, up in the headwaters, has a really important role to play in helping us keep our streams hydrated, even through the summer and fall. It’s really climate change that has caused beavers to reenter the zeitgeist.

And the flurry of isolated beaver success all across the planet. Like Scotland. Vancouver. And Martinez. Don’t forget that. Ahem.

In your book you propose using beavers like medics, dropping them onto the front lines of climate change. Does Eastern Washington need this type of treatment?

One of the reasons that I was actually excited to move to Spokane when the opportunity arose, this is a city with a great beaver consciousness and culture already. There’s the Lands Council, which has had a very active beaver program for at least a decade, and has done lots of beaver relocation across Eastern Washington. There’s the fact that when you walk along the Spokane River, along the riverfront, you see half the trees down there have been wrapped with wire to prevent beavers from chewing them down. In a lot of cities those tree-chewing beavers would be killed. But in Spokane, there’s a great commitment to managing those impacts nonlethally. I think there’s already a lot of good beaver work happening in this area.

But certainly there’s the need for more. Hiking and camping around Eastern Washington, all the time I see streams that would have historically had a very abundant beaver population, where they just don’t seem to occur. One great example is Hangman Creek. Here’s this watershed that’s fantastic beaver habitat, and I think they are in there, but in very low abundance. Every spring it’s just dumping huge amounts of agricultural runoff into the Spokane River. Beavers would be one potential solution to that problem, by building dams, slowing water down, causing all of that sediment to settle out of the water column. They really have an important role to play in mitigating some of that agricultural pollution.

So Ben’s doing a swanky event on the 18th at the Montvale center in spokane where VIP tickets are 40 dollars, get you a copy of the book and a private soiree with the author. Of course our favorite event with the author was when he came over for pizza after the 2017 festival, hunched over at our kitchen table and inscribed my copy of his book with this;
 

 

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