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

Category: Beaver Art


The fourth beaver paper published in the Journal of Fish and Wildlife by Rick Lanman hits VERY close to home. I am known to nod off reading academic papers but this had me on the edge of my seat all the way to its stunning conclusion.  It looks specifically at Western Message Petroglyphs on a rock in fremont. These messages recorded on rocks probably by some white man who understood native writing. They have been extensively studied and this likely comes from the second half of the 1800’s.

If you are anything like me you immediately want to see the rock. But there’s some education that needs to happen first. Once thought to represent “Fake indian writing” we now know that there are 38 sites of WMP’saround the state and the were done by people with a great knowledge of native american symbols. They contained usually important messages of information that wasn’t intended for all eyes.

This means it’s write along your commute. Right in your fuckin backyard.
And it means that someone at the time knew that beavers mattered, and removing all of them from alameda creek was a really serious thing to do. That was going to have repercussions in the future for years and years to come.


So WMP’s are read like a message from left to write, and the comb figure was accepted to mean home or lodge. So this means:

Gee what would have possibly made a lot of beavers die in 18th century. I’m wracking my brain. Can you think of anything?

And because this is Rick Lanman writing this paper he left nothing to chance and outlined resources every step of his conclusions. So if you want to be convinced, impressed or just know more click on the title to go read the full article.

As for me I’m just going to stand stunned and think about someone knowing way back in 1860 that taking all the beavers out of Alameda Creek was going to be bad news for a rapidly drying state that was trying to populate itself. And I’m going to thank beavers lucky stars that Dr. Lanman got curious about them in the first place.


You would think California would catch on, Eventually. I mean drought after drought. You would think all those almond growers would eventually wake up and smell the coffee so to speak. But you’d be wrong, California is robust in its capacity to remain ignorant.

Maybe not Oregon.

A unique way to conserve water

Rancher Jay Wilde shares how he uses man-made beaver dams to increase water availability on his ranch

PHOTO COURTESY OF BEAVERWORKS - Rancher Jay Wilde recently shared how he has used beaver dam analogues, human-made beaver dams, to conserve water on his ranch.

Rancher Jay Wilde recently shared how he has used beaver dam analogues, human-made beaver dams, to conserve water on his ranch.

As drought conditions persist locally, some members of the agriculture community were recently provided some unique water conservation tips.

Jay Wilde, a rancher in Preston, Idaho, presented “BDAs, Beavers and Bonanza on an Idaho Ranch” earlier this month at the Crook County High School auditorium. The event centered on his story of stream restoration using beaver dam analogues (BDAs) on his ranch. The event was provided by Crooked River Watershed Council and BeaverWorks Oregon.

Jay Wilde is the secret sauce on the beaver acceptability burger. If we had two of him in every state I could retire. I’m so impressed with how he talks to folks about the things they never believe me when I say them,

“This is a process that took Mr. Wilde about 15 years to finish and really implement,” Mercer said. “He had a vision of what it should be. He really felt like his land was broken, and it was his commitment and inspiration to really start healing the land.”

The Crooked River Watershed Council supports the land restoration method, highlighting several ways it could help the local watershed.

“The council believes bringing beavers back to their former and appropriate habitats increases the overall amount of water retained in the watershed, raises groundwater levels in areas associated with beaver ponds, and makes for a more resilient landscape,” said Chris Gannon, council coordinator for the Crook River Watershed Council. “Using tools such as BDAs to encourage beavers to set up a permanent presence may be necessary to create suitable conditions and bridge the time gap until they become established.”

I believe that too Jay! Let’s hope that a few people will follow your lead and convince their neighbors to do the same.

I have to end today with a  cautionary tale about what happens when you have a beaver mural painted by your front door. Yesterday comcast had to come back a second time to activate the phone line they said they activated the day before. This much improved tech announced his presence using the beaver knocker which is always a good sign. And then asked about the beaver mural. And also expressed interest in the ones he had seen in town and mentioned Tim Hon and the illuminaries.

Because you see he was also a muralist. He just finished one in Antioch. And was starting one in Pittsburg, where on used to work. And no I’m not kidding. So we chatted about mural painting and beavers  and keeping city leaders from interfering too much and he fixed our phone lines perfectly. Because sometimes  what you love doing is not the thing that pays the bills.[wonderplugin_video iframe=”https://youtu.be/QK8fanIDBt8″ lightbox=0 lightboxsize=1 lightboxwidth=960 lightboxheight=540 autoopen=0 autoopendelay=0 autoclose=0 lightboxtitle=”” lightboxgroup=”” lightboxshownavigation=0 showimage=”” lightboxoptions=”” videowidth=600 videoheight=400 keepaspectratio=1 autoplay=0 loop=0 videocss=”position:relative;display:block;background-color:#000;overflow:hidden;max-width:100%;margin:0 auto;” playbutton=”https://www.martinezbeavers.org/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/wonderplugin-video-embed/engine/playvideo-64-64-0.png”]

Two days until the launch. Just in time for heidi’s birthday and no, I’m not kidding. I’m ready are you?

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2 days to launch – Droughts & difficulty modes preview

on September 15 – exactly two days from now – Timberborn Early Access begins. To keep you up to date with what to expect from the game in its new incarnation, we’ll be counting down to the release date with daily previews on different aspects of our beaver city-builder.

Today, let’s look at Timberborn’s core feature, droughts, and how they affect the game’s flow and difficulty. Because you know, we’ll have different difficulty modes at launch. We were planning to add that later, but since it was often requested, we moved it up on our priority list.

Not only that, we’re giving you an option to create a custom difficulty . You can choose how many beavers you start with, how much water and food they need, how many resources they have at the beginning of the game and how long the droughts will be. If you want to, you can make it an ultimate sandbox experience, or an ultimate hardcore desert world.

No no no, you’re saying. I can hear you. Heidi made this up. She’s did some kind of graphic and now she’s pretending this is real. But she’s not. It’s totally fucking real.

It’s post-apocalypse now, which means the drought (previously: “dry season”) eventually comes. The strength of water sources on the map begins to fade and after a while, the water sources “turn off” completely while the evaporation continues. The river beds gradually dry up and with them – the surrounding areas. Fields and forests turn yellow and will wither unless you have a way of preventing that with a clever combination of dams, floodgates, irrigation towers, canals, water dumps etc.

If you do not prepare for a drought properly, you will also end up with useless pumps and water wheels, so unless there’s a lot of water in the tanks and you have alternative power sources, your population might wither too, if you catch our drift.
Here’s a note for our demo players – we’re evil and we made the second drought in the demo a little too severe on purpose. That’s not what will happen to you in the normal game. Sorry, not sorry.

You would think i made this up. Especially the dialogue where the beavers reflect on the end of the stupid humans who caused a world that they could not survive. But i did not. it’s real.

And it launches on wednesday!


Well this should be interesting. A new book is dropping today with some lovely illustrations. I pre-ordered my copy from amazon. Here’s the review I found from “Ms Yingling reads:”

In this beautifully illustrated picture book, the complicated relationship between beavers and their ecosystem is explored, with special emphasis on how they interact with otters. Beaver first finds a stream, then sets out to painstakingly cut down trees, dam up the stream, and create his lodge. A female beaver arrives and the work continues. The newly created pond attracts a variety of wildlife, including birds and beetles who live on the trees that the pond causes to die.

When Otter arrives, its a sign that the area is healthy, but the otters often damage the dam in order to get to other bodies of water, and are loud and rambunctious. The otters eat different foods from the beavers, so the two are able to coexist. In addition to the story, with its watercolor illustrations rich in the blues and greens of the aquatic setting, there is information at the back of the book about beavers, otters, and the building of dams.

Strengths: Collard does a great job at finding topics that are of interest to children and educators alike, and also balances stories and information nicely. I can’t say that I knew a lot about beavers and their effect on the environment, so I learned a lot from this. It would be a great book to hand to a reader who has picked up Terry Lynn Johnson’s Rescue at Lake Wild.

Weaknesses: I wouldn’t have minded a little more information about how beavers change their environments by building dams, but it’s not really necessary for this book.

What I really think: This is a great choice for readers who are a little too young for the amount of information included in books like this author’s Hopping Ahead of Climate Change or Firebirds: Valuing Natural Wildfires and Burned Forests and would make a great read aloud for classes studying ecology, animals, or getting along with others!

Hmm just checking but I don’t see a mention of the fact that otters mooch off all the things that beavers provide and give nothing in return. Oh except sometimes they eat the babies. I guess that would be a really upsetting children’s book huh?

Now to be totally fair to the attractive moochers I thought long and hard about this yesterday and determined that it’s possible that the way they poop all those delicious nutrients onto the shore after devouring all the salmon and crayfish that beaver ponds nurture it’s possible that those otter recyclings provide nutrients for then new willow that coppices in the area. Which ultimately feed the beavers.

So I guess, on reflection, otters DO give something back to the friendship. Their shit.  Beavers give their time and their effort and their homes and sometimes their lives. And otter give their shit.

Haven’t we all had ‘friends’ like that?


The illustrations by Meg Sodano are really lovely. If you’d like to pick up a copy of your very own they go on sale today at Amazon.

 
 

From our friends at the Kent Wildlife Trust,

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