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

Category: Beaver Art


Humans are encroaching all over the world, moving into wild spaces that used to be left to the creatures who we call ‘animals’. It is estimated that by the next census more than 80% of the population will live in urban areas, not just in the US. It’s true from Canada to Wisconsin and Peyong. This means we are forced to cross paths with wildlife more and more often.  And we need more and more articles like this to show the way.

Living Green: Learning to live with azzznd help our local wildlife

Bear season isn’t far away in the Tri-Cities and, with it, a focus on managing attractants such as garbage. But there’s more to living with bears and other wildlife than keeping our food waste inside until it’s time for pickup.

Urbanization affects how wildlife moves through watersheds — and, FYI, we all live in a watershed. Development fragments and destroys wildlife habitat. Wildlife must then adjust to an ever-changing world, seeking new habitat to forage for food, hunt for prey and raise their young.

We can minimize stressful encounters and potential conflict with wildlife by being aware of the diversity of wildlife around us, by using common sense and by employing preventative techniques. Bear and coyote sightings, for example, often increase as a result of humans providing a food source.

What a wonderful way to start an article! Remember it wasn’t very long ago that we were writing about the fact that conservationists are noting that the green areas inside cities are often the greatest boost to biodiversity.

Recently, I sat down with local beaver advocates Jim and Judy Atkinson. I wanted to hear about their more than 25 years of experience living in Jasper National Park and how they had come to have such a deep appreciation and passion for so many of our native wildlife.

First deer, then elk, came into town annually to give birth, where the urban environment afforded them temporary protection from predators. As they were understandably protective of their calves, Parks Canada eventually had to deter their return by fencing off large grassy areas on which the elk liked to graze (school grounds and fields), and to dissuade them from coming into town by waving hockey sticks with plastic streamers attached

Returning to the industrious beaver, I am further enlightened by the Atkinsons. Beavers have existed for the past 30 to 60 million years. Spanning some 300 years, beaver trapping occurred ahead of European settlers and decimated the mammals’ population to 1% of its original numbers.

Today’s society, therefore, has not co-evolved with beavers. The Haida First Nation, on the other hand, has long recognized the interconnection between beavers and salmon. Beaver dams create ponds that provide resting areas for migrating salmon and make ideal nurseries for juvenile fish by creating complex edge habitat, increasing insect food supply and contributing beneficial woody debris into the ecosystem.

Excellent! Jim and Judy are the gifts to beavers that keep on giving! I’m so grateful for their work and that our paths crossed. I wish this article was syndicated to appear in a million newspapers. Here in Martinez understand very well that the benefits of urban beavers aren’t just for salmon, but for the lives of all the people who protect them.

Quill: Lori Preusch

Which brings me to the donation we received yesterday from enormously talented artist Lori Preusch of Dandelion based in Colorado.

Her stunning illustrations capture the gloriously incongruous magic of childhood and wildlife in all it’s impossible splendor. She generously sent a  large studio print and several cards sets which we are thrilled to add to the auction. I can’t tell you how mesmerizing they are to look at, so I thought I would share some of the images.

Here was her generous response when I asked for a donation:

I would be happy to donate to your Worth a Dam festival. You have no idea how much beavers have played a role in my own life. In fact we have one of those flow devices on our property which we call the “beaver deceiver,” because of a similar situation we had regarding neighbors who didn’t enjoy the beavers as much as we do. I live with beavers every day and adore them. Let me know what your deadline is and if you have an image or two in mind that you think would be particularly appreciated by your group. I am sorry to say that I do not yet have a beaver image but will I am sure at some point. I’ll wait to hear from you and then send a few things your way. Lori

Rhapsody: Lory Preusch
Another Tale: Lori Preusch

 

1000 stories: Lory Preusch
Heart of Spring: Dandelion

This was the image I saw online that made me track her down originally. I’m honestly not kidding when I say go check out her  website. You will spend an hour just drinking in her images. When I see them I remember that magical portal I could step through freely as a child, either with a wondrous new book or with a fanciful story and a willing imagination. She is an amazingly talented with an eye for wonder.

Thank you so much, Lory.


We’ve reached that in delicate period of pre-festival frenzy when there are really only two things I do  – and I do them all the time.  Talking people into things (like can we have access to water in the park for the EBRP fish mobile?) and talking people outta things (like will you donate one of these for the silent auction?). Everyday. All day. Thing one or thing two. That’s all I do.

I’ve been scouring beaver art work online in order to find possible donations to the silent auction. When I came across this and was amused in a familiar way. You might be too. It’s the work of an artist in Denmark. Based on the skills of one we know very well.

You would think that with SO many people advocating  how and why to live with beavers in the wide world there would be enough compelling photos of the creatures not to rely exclusively on Martinez, wouldn’t you?

Apparently not.


Every child knows what “Build-a-Bear” is. Just ask them. Hardly a birthday party goes by that some classmate doesn’t invite them to tag along. It’s as american as apple pie, and every bit  as comericial as Disneyland.

I thought it was time they learn how to “Build-a-Beaver Pond” too.

Monday Amy G. Hall finished the art work for the “empty beaver pond” children will be filling with the wildlife stickers they gather at the beaver festival. Since  yesterday was the last day of a 40% off sale at Vistaprint I worked hard to get the  cards done so worth a dam would save a penny or two. These will be large glossy postcards that children will get from me to begin the activity.  They will also get a map showing which booths to visit to gather the stickers and told they need to say why beaver  ponds help that species to ‘earn’ that sticker.

The stickers will be under an inch and look like this, representing species that might be found on or under the water – or on the bank at a beaver pond. then the children can ‘place’ the stickers on the card where they belong and “Build” their own Beaver Pond.

 It has already been hinted that the Contra Costa Fish and Wildlife Committee likes this idea and will be granting funds for this educational activity.  Now I just need to finish the stickers and chose the groups who will be handing them out!

Meanwhile, Amy has the hard job. She will be chalking a 10X10 illustration of the “filled beaver pond” in the park center. By the end of the day it will look something like this:


“Behold, You have driven me this day from the face of the ground; and from Your face I will be hidden, and I will be a vagrant and a wanderer on the earth, and whoever finds me will trap me    

Genesis 4:14

Guess what we saw yesterday?

This little dam is looking so substantial it can be  seen from the bridge. I called Moses and implored him to take a look. He just stopped by after seeing a big and little beaver this morning. He saw a big beaver and a little beaver. Footage will follow soon. Hurray we have beavers! Hurray Martinez is complete again!

Here’s the almost yearling who was born this October.

And a parent. Moses saw but wasn’t able to film a second, larger beaver. So that’s the whole fam-damily!

 

Since sundays are for joyful news only, I thought I would share some wonderful images from the newly translated book fittingly called “Welcome Home, Beaver” by Marcus Weightman of Rotterdam. He is an architect turned author that has created the most delightful story book. 

The story follows and adventurous beaver who leaves his home (ahem) and can’t find his way back. His buddy brings a hot air balloon to help him search and he eventually finds many homes that aren’t his.

After traveling to the artic, the prairie, and africa to see the many amazing homes of wildlife living underground he finds his way home to North America and is happy to reunite with his family.
Trust me, You need this book. This delightful look at the intricate homes of wildlife gives a new name to the very idea of over/under images. You can pick up your copy here.

Nobody told me there would be days like this! With a fantastic news story from our friends in Port Moody AND a wonderful article about a Brooklyn teacher leading her class in beaver education from the National Wildlife Foundation. For the first time I can remember I’m spoiled for choice. I can’t decide which to share with you first. But I will go here because it’s just so DAM cute!

Brooklyn Students Build Beaver Dams

Emily A. Fano

In December 2017, Diane Corrigan – a wildlife enthusiast and early childhood science teacher at PS 179 in Brooklyn – came upon an article about how a family of beavers were “wreaking havoc” in the Staten Island neighborhood of Richmond. Department of Environmental Protection officials came out during the day and cleared a two-foot hole in the dam. The beavers – known for being skilled engineers – repaired the hole overnight. At the time of this writing, the fate of the Staten Island beavers is unknown.

This human-wildlife conflict with New York State’s official animal piqued Corrigan’s interest. She decided to use it as a teachable moment with her first graders, not only to help students learn about beavers and the many wild animals we share our city with, but to explore an important question: Can wildlife and humans co-exist in densely populated urban areas like NYC?

Beaver pond levelers were successfully used in two beaver ponds in Utah to prevent flooding of a Walmart parking lot without disturbing the beavers – a win for wildlife and humans. Could this be tried in Staten Island?

In December 2017, Corrigan gave her students an assignment: If you were a beaver and had to build your home, what would your lodge and dam look like?

Although many people consider them a nuisance, they’re actually a keystone species that provides many ecological benefits. Beaver ponds, for example, improve water quality, create habitat for many other species, reduce erosion, and recharge groundwater reserves.

Aaaandddd scene! What a wonderful teaching moment, about beavers, empathy, problem-solving and ecology! The fate of those Richmond beavers just got instantly less gloomy. Come share your work at the beaver festival and you will meet SO many like minds. Diane Corrigan, there are precious few things I’m sure of in this crazy world, but this is definitely one:

And on to Port Moody where the valiant struggle and sadness has turned into a victory lap. The heroes Judy and Jim have already told me  will be making the pilgrimage to our festival, and I can’t wait to meet them in person!

Port Moody to develop beaver management plan

The city of Port Moody will develop a beaver management plan after the death last December of a beaver kit during efforts to relocate its family from a storm sewer pipe in Pigeon Creek.

Coun. Meghan Lahti said such a plan will help the city rebuild trust with residents, particularly in the Klahanie neighbourhood through which the creek runs and who had become fond of the creatures.

One of those residents, Judy Taylor-Atkinson, said a proper management plan “will open the channel to good science” and make it possible for the beavers to thrive.

She said the ponds of quiet water created when beavers build dams improve the survival rate of juvenile salmon, attract bugs and the birds and bats that feed on them, as well as salamanders.

“Beavers can’t make rain but they keep water on the land,” Taylor-Atkinson said.

“It is important to understand the nature of beavers in order to determine the best management of them,” Lahti said in a report presented to council Tuesday.She said the animals are a “keystone” species that play a crucial role in the local ecosystem.

She said implementing a beaver management plan should “use innovative techniques for dam management where applicable” while avoiding extermination or relocation whenever possible.

 Music to our ears! Mark this day on your calendar because it isn’t ever morning that I get to write about two such pride-inducing stories. Judy and Jim who worked SO hard and ended their vacation  leaving Arizona early to face a slew of bad faith just wrestled this heifer of a story until they got everything on it’s feet again. I am so impressed with your hard work and the help of your neighbors.  I try not to say the obvious things, but sometimes it’s unavoidable.

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