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

Category: Beaver Art


This memorial day weekend is full of special treats, including an Italian Street Painting Festival in Santa Barbara hosted by the SB Permaculture network. They are opening it up to virtual participants online. Guess what their theme is?

Santa Barbara Permaculture Network joins I Madonnari Street Chalk Art Festival 2020 – Online

Please join us online over the three day holiday weekend as our featured artist Ray Cirino along with enthusiastic volunteers, creates an Ecosystem Restoration themed pastel chalk art square, highlighting our favorite ecosystem restoration hero, the beaver! The fun begins to unfold on Friday, May 23, continuing to its completion on Sunday, May 25. All three days will be available for viewing online.

Been there done that! What a remarkable showing for friends! Rotten luck that this had to be Covid-ed into the shadows. But we’ll virtually participate and wish them well. This is something we know a bit about, you see.

Or maybe this:

You know, I think you inspired me. I could go on and on…

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There were fun celebration wishes from our beaver friends yesterday on. This came from Emily Fairfax, who reminded us all to stay safe. Happy Easter from the Easter Beaver!

Not to be outdone or denomenational Ben Goldfarb posted back his own greeting. Beavers respect all cultures. Happy Passover from our Jewish colony! (Snacking on some homemade matzah.)

To which I would only add that beavers are fairly practical agnostics, which will take any port in a storm, or even make their own.


There;s a beautiful retrospective of Rusty Cohn’s photographs at the Napa beaver pond in yesterday’s Napa register for International beaver day. What a fine body of work! And of course I mean both Rusty and the beavers. Run don’t walk over to the paper to see every image, but here are a few of my favorites.

The first might be the finest photo I have ever seen of a beaver pair bonding.

Photos: Life at Napa’s Beaver Lodge at Tulocay Creek

Did you know April 7 is International Beaver Day? In honor of the occasion, we are sharing this photo gallery of our local beaver family at Tulocay Creek. These photos are from 2017-2019 … simpler times. Enjoy!

The Tulocay Creek beaver pond is located next to the Hawthorne Suites Hotel, 314 Soscol Ave., Napa. At the creek, you’ll find river otters, mink, muskrats and herons as well as beavers. Here are some photos of the critters taken by local photographer Rusty Cohn.

 

“Since beavers are nocturnal, the heat doesn’t seem to bother them,” Cohn said. “They come out a little before sunset and are mainly in the water. During the day they are sleeping either in a bank den in the side of the creek bank under a fair amount of dirt, or inside a lodge which is made of mud and sticks mainly.”

Follow the link to look at the full article. Aren’t those beautiful?There is an excellent one of an adult beaver underwater which I’m partial to by Roland Dumas. Of course he didn’t just capture beavers in all their glory, he got some wonderful shots of the crowd of wildlife they supported too. Heron, otter, mink. The usual suspects. Here is a special favorite.

Unfortunately Stacy couldn’t manage a reading. So we never got the beaver song we deserve but there is fun discussion on Emily Fairfax’s twitter feed for International Beaver Day about just exactly what’s wrong with otters. I swear to God I didn’t write this. I’m referring especially to question three.

Just remember I had NOTHING TO DO WITH THIS.

She got this lovely response from Portland artist Roger Peet.  Twitter handle “Wedge tailed Oogle” who is coordinating the endangered species mural project for the Center for Biological Diversity. He told Ben how to get this print from him on the feed but I don’t see it yet in his shop. It’s incredible.

The entire discussion is very well worth reading. We are so lucky to have Emily on our team. She will be leading the way when all of us our just echoes. An amazing image was posted by someone I don’t know (YET).

Finally a sad goodbye to Mr. Prine with a special song for the petulant king who brought us here.

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No school, no bars no restaurants, no kidding. We are all in cages now. But thank goodness our cages have comfortable furniture, restrooms and internet to keep us busy. Maybe it’s time to think about compelling artist Lisa Ericson and what her dramatic paintings appear to be missing.

Hyperrealistic Paintings of Migrating Animals Carrying Tiny Ecosystems on Their Backs

Combining her hyperrealistic style with her vivid imagination, Portland-based artist Lisa Ericson creates surreal, nature-inspired animal paintings. Each colorful acrylic-on-panel artwork from her Border Crossing series depicts fantastical combinations of plants and animals, all of which seem to be traveling on epic journeys to unknown lands.

From turtles carrying mini mobile habitats on their shells to small mammals, birds, and reptiles hitching a ride on the backs of swimming pelicans, each scene is like a tiny version of “Noah’s Ark.” Erikson’s work merges themes of animal migration in the wild with human migration and the refugee crisis. In one piece, titled Into the Dark, a mother lemur perches on a white pelican while her babies cling to her. “I made Into the Dark in response to the horror of the policy of separating children from their parents at the U.S. border,” Ericson reveals. “Often when I work, I get lost in the technical aspects of painting—the color, seeing the image take shape brushstroke by brushstroke—but this subject matter was a little raw for me and I felt emotional about it all the way through.”

Beautiful in every detail. But call me crazy, but when I think of an animal that carries his ecosystem on his back there is one particular mammal that springs to mind, isn’t a pelican or turtle.

With black backgrounds, each stunning painting is packed full of minute details, reminiscent of the realist still life paintings of the Dutch Masters. Ericson’s use of acrylic paint is jaw-droppingly precise, capturing each creature’s soft fur, reptilian scales, and quill-like feathers with a myriad of tiny brushstrokes.

Now I You can see even more of Ericson’s work on her website and Instagram.

Now, I know what you’re thinking. Beavers don’t “migrate” so much as disperse. But maybe they migrate exactly as much as humans do and for the very same reasons. Our beavers ‘migrated’ eventually.  Mary and Joseph migrated. When they’re displaced, or their homeland becomes unsafe. They will leave to find a new home. And they carry so many species with them.

Lisa gets an email suggesting this.Meanwhile we’re all migrant families in cages now. So settle in and get used to it.


This was on the the news the other day in Chesterfield Virginia. Lori Gongaware thinks she should be in the Guinness book of World Records for her beaver collection. I coughed politely into my beaver handkerchief and wished her well.

Chesterfield woman hopes to break Guinness World Record with her beaver collection

“I tend to take things to an extreme,” said collector Lori Gongaware.”

Lori says this all started as a joke but that joke blossomed into a collection that now takes up a whole room in her home.

“I thought ‘wouldn’t it be funny to have a beaver collection that was beaver animals but then have one beaver-cleaver from beaver-cleaver,’” said Gongaware. “I got everything. I got bottle openers, coffee cups, stampers, pencil sharpers and even a tattoo.”

Lori’s love for beavers has brought her more than just joy, but a chance to land her in the record books. “When I first started think of the record I was like gosh, I think that I probably have the most beaver items of anyone,” said Gongaware.

 I can only smile indulgently say “Bless her heart” and pat her affectionately on the shoulder. Because the inside of my entire home, car, garden and garage would make the inside of her guest bedroom look like a n scale dollhouse. My collection came through design and accident and gifts and projects and silent auction items from around the world that we had to bid on because they were too cool to pass up. My collection is a working collection. meaning anyone of those beavers might be used for a event or purpose on any given day, An art project an educational tool or an exhibit or a christmas tree.

There’s a nice video of Lori’s collection at the link that I sadly can’t share here. It provides an excellent opportunity to say how many of these I already have. 1456? Good lord if you were to include children’s creations I would be many times that figure. Here is what Ben Goldfarb had to say about it in Eager. I was deeply offended when I first read it because it makes me look like a kook. But I have since accepted the truth and realized I kind of am.

To my knowledge, the world’s largest collection of beaver-themed tchotchkes, knickknacks, and memorabilia is housed in an oak-shaded street in Martinez, California. To enter, you must pass beneath the mural that hangs over the front porch — a reddish beaver, stick grasped in forepaws, tail raised in salutation. The dim interior has the feel of a shrine. Beaver magnets cling to the refrigerator; plush beavers perch atop the bureaus; a gallery’s worth of beaver paintings, prints, and posters stare down from every wall. Gnawed stumps rest next to the fireplace. Embroidered beaver napkins hang in the kitchen. In the backyard, a clay beaver crouches in the birdbath. If I’d come during Christmas, I would have seen a cardboard beaver cut-out, roughly the size of a black bear, strung with lights on the front lawn.

The fanatical curator of this collection is a candid, vivacious woman named Heidi Perryman, a child psychologist who, through willpower and single-mindedness, has become one of the planet’s foremost authorities on Castor canadensis. After months of exchanged emails, Perryman and I resolved to rendezvous in Martinez on the Fourth of July.

So go ahead, Lori. Be in the Guinness book of records. But we all know the truth. And it’s already in print.

 

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