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

Category: Beaver Book


Yesterday was a great day to be a beaver blogger, and there are precious little of those. But today isn’t bad. Why not curl up tonight by the fire to hear another beaver tale? This one hosted by The Lands Council.

Holiday Story Hour

Join us for a cozy, fire-side Holiday Story Hour to talk about the co-existence of keystone species like wolves and beavers with local authors Ben Goldfarb and Eli Francovich. Ben, author of Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter, and Eli will welcome us into their fireside reading nooks to read from their books and tell us the story of how it came to be. The readings and stories will be followed by a candid conversation between the two authors on coexistence with this keystone species and an audience Q&A.

We appreciate the warmth and support of YOU and your families this holiday season.

Please RSVP below to receive the Zoom link for this event.

I usually watch the news then, But beaver news has GOT to be better.

Tomorrow morning is the second planning meeting for the California Beaver Summit which is almost certainly going to happen and going to be a dam revelation. Wish us luck.


Our bookish friends with a beaver literary bent had some news recently I wanted to share. The first is that Frances Backhouse (They once were hats) recently sent her finished book to the printers and is expecting copies to hit the shelves in May. Here’s what she posted on FB:

My new beaver book for kids is almost ready to head to the printer and I’m getting ever more excited about launching it next spring. The designer at Orca Book Publishers did a fantastic job on the whole book, including this wonderful cover.

Of course Martinez kids and beavers are in it somewhere and I can’t wait to see it in person!

Beavers: Radical Rodents and Ecosystem Engineers will be published in May 2021.

Written for kids ages 9 to 13, this new book looks at the beaver’s biology and behavior and illuminates its vital role as a keystone species. It’s packed with facts and photos, as well as personal stories about conservationists, scientists and youth who are working to build a better future for our furry friends.

You can sign up for updates by adding your email to the list if you are interested here:

More news on the literary front is that Ben Goldfarb is still hard at work on his new book about road ecology. Recently he one of 8 recipients of the Whiting Grant for Nonfiction writing.

Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant

The Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant of $40,000 is awarded to writers in the process of completing a book of deeply researched and imaginatively composed nonfiction. The Whiting Foundation recognizes that these works are essential to our culture, but come into being at great cost to writers in time and resources. The grant is intended to encourage original and ambitious projects by giving recipients the additional means to do exacting research and devote time to composition.

I’m sure the much needed help with allow him to keep striving in what seems to be a very impressive effort, obviously one now affected by Covid and travel restrictions.

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More recent news from our friends at the Wildlife Trusts in England who managed to add a Beaver gift card added to their roster this year. For five pounds you can see some beavery good cheer to the naturalist in your life, and help a great cause..Click on the image to send your very own, of course we already know all the reasons why, but the background says:

This charity gift card helps look after habitat for beavers and all their friends. Wildlife is having a hard time in the UK. Habitat loss and climate change are just some of the factors that are making life harder for mammals, birds and insects.

That’s why The Wildlife Trusts are creating and protecting precious habitat and campaigning for nature’s recovery. Our mission is to protect, connect and restore at least 30% of land and sea for nature by 2030.

This gift supports our 3030 campaign. All funds raised will go towards supporting Wildlife Trust projects that look after wildlife and wild places in the UK.

Imagine such a thing in America. You really can’t can you, but it will happen someday. Just mark my words.

 

Yesterday was a cultural explosion for beavers. Two excellent films were uploaded by the Beaver Trust and a fine op-ed was published in the Oregon Register-Guard. I am spoiled for choice. But I’ll start with this:

Keep keystone beavers safe

Chuck Erickson Special to Eugene Register-Guard USA TODAY NETWORK At 8 a.m. Friday, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife will hold another commission hearing to ban trapping beavers in our national forests. This action is part of 21st century science and the importance of keystone species and our imperiled fisheries.

The official definition of a keystone species is ‘a species on which other species in an ecosystem largely depend, such that if it were removed the ecosystem would change drastically.’

Beavers fit this definition, and the fact that they do is important for wetland conservation efforts.

Isn’t that wonderful? Every now and then I appreciate the dangers beavers face in Scotland and Oregon and Montana because motivates people to write such wonderful articles and letters about them.

There is more happening with beaver ponding colonies than we can see with our eyes. As ponds form in areas where trees have been cut, all that is left are stumps that have become flooded by the ponded waters. If given enough time, the root systems of these stumps rot away and the ponded water connects to the sub-waters in alluvial soils (sand and rock).

These sub-surface waters are cooled, filtered and flow downstream as springs and seeps. This reduces water temperature and enhances streambed environments. Over and over this process happens. Trees drill into the ground and the beavers cut them down connecting warmer surface water with colder ground waters. Remember the rule: Water seeks the same level as it enters.

Without the beavers’ intervention, our silted-in stream banks act as a cap trapping the water from entering and exiting the alluvial soils. This is one of the reasons we have warmer river temperatures. Without active beaver colonies, the cooling cycle is broken with diminished water storage.

Wow this author knows his beaver facts. Who is it? Chuck Erickson of Coos Bay. I can find lots of letters in protest. but not any official title. Call it a hunch but I don’t think he works for fish and game.

Recent research shows that beavers have a positive effect in areas prone to large fires. The wetlands beavers create recover quicker and help support wildlife. The firebreaks these animals create is needed especially during drought conditions. Beaver colonies trap large amounts of sediments and help improve spawning habitat for fish.

Besides storing and cooling waters, beaver dams may provide a physical barrier to spawning fish during drought years. Though well-intentioned biologists have opened these blocked areas in the past, they may be doing more harm than good. It is more likely nature is holding the fish back for a reason. The blocked fish are forced to spawn in areas with sufficient water instead of upriver where there may not survive or successfully reproduce.

Science and researchers have developed new methods that limit the damages that sometimes happen when culverts become blocked. Sometimes called beaver deceivers, these devices fool these animals so they don’t plug areas that need to drain. They also are used to control water levels behind beaver impounded water areas.

Let’s give our fisheries the boost they deserve.

Very well said. Thank you Chuck!  You would think that with so many people defending them some of this might sink in?

I’m going to share my favorite film dropped by the Beaver Trust now. It’s not a visual experience but an auditory one. Close your eyes and listen to this amazing author paint a picture and pay especial attention to the “BIG STORY” scene inside the lodge. The one that happened “Before Scent or Sound“.

It captured all my imagination and gave me chills for a day.

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63 respondents to the survey so far and I had to bite the bullet and pay for the privelidge of knowing results for more than 40. Note to self: Free things are expensive. But if it helps get this off the ground it’s worth it, right?

All in all I’m feeling pretty encouraged by the response. I’m guessing if you can get 200 people to respond to a survey you might be able to get 5o people to sign up for a conference?

Meanwhile there’s been some fine writing on the beaver front, starting with this excerpt from Stephen R, Brown’s new book about mistakes in beaver writing, one of our favorite topics.

Tall beaver tales show a vital animal in Canada’s history was also misunderstood

In this excerpt from “The Company: The Rise and Fall of the Hudson’s Bay Empire,” the author discusses what else but the beaver, so vital for the early founding of the Hudson’s Bay Co. It seems the rodent’s importance paled in comparison to its reputation.

The Jesuit priest Father Le Jeune wrote in 1634 that the Montagnais “say that (beaver) is the animal well-beloved by the French, English and Basques, in a word, by the Europeans.” When he was a guest travelling in their country, Le Jeune “heard my host say one day, jokingly, ‘The Beaver does everything perfectly well, it makes kettles, hatchets, swords, knives, bread; and, in short, it makes everything.’

He probably thought he was joking at the time, but given the ecosystem services the beaver provides, we know better now.

Beavers were important animals in the cultural and spiritual traditions of many Indigenous peoples of North America, a source of metaphorical symbolism. In some mythologies they could represent perseverance or hard work and productivity, but also stubbornness. Beavers could be represented as the shapers of the world, a nod to their transformative landscape redesign. Conversely, they could be viewed as selfish for continuously building dams and flooding places without consulting other animals.

Yes those SELFISH beavers. Storing water, providing more nutrients for fish, frogs and otters. Just where do they get off anyway?

Beavers could occupy symbolic positions in the cosmology and were often used as allegory, the classic example being the Woman Who Married a Beaver, an Ojibwa (Anishinaabe) story in which a woman leaves her people and goes to dwell with her husband, a beaver, only returning to visit her human family periodically. They have children, and the husband and offspring, who also occasionally visit the human world, are killed by hunters but return alive to the beaver world each time with gifts of tobacco and needles and other trade goods.

Only upon the beaver-husband’s death in the beaver world do the woman and her children return to the human world, bringing with them an important message: always honour the beaver and never discredit or slander them on pain of bringing down a curse of poor fortune at hunting.

Well of course. Obviously. Everybody knows that.

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Written accounts of beavers had them dwelling in sprawling communal house-villages, speaking to each other and working in organized groups to secure food and build their dome-like dwellings. Some writers claimed that they had social stratification, including the use of beaver- slaves to speed the construction. One early 18th-century observer, Pierre-François-Xavier de Charlevoix, mused that “there are sometimes three or four hundred of them in one place, forming a town which might properly enough be called a little Venice.”

Gosh I want to go, don’t you? Actually American writer James Fenimore Cooper said a similar thing in “Last of the Mohicans“. Either it really happened or lots of people in different places convinced themselves it happened. When you look at the huge beaver dam in Alberta that was built by multiple generations of many families working together, it seems a little less foolish.

In his classic “Journey to the Northern Ocean” he wrote: “I cannot refrain from smiling when I read the accounts of different authors who have written on the economy of those animals, as there seems to be a contest between them, who shall most exceed in fiction … Little remains to be added beside a vocabulary of their language, a code of their laws, and a sketch of their religion.”

Hearne also addressed the claim that the beaver’s tail was actually a natural trowel used in the construction of their apartments or for plastering the inner walls. “It would be as impossible for a beaver to use its tail as a trowel,” he wrote, “ … as it would have been for Sir James Thornhill to have painted the dome of St. Paul’s Cathedral without the assistance of scaffolding.”

Now that’s pretty darn interesting. A scoffer of beaver lore before me. I might need to check out what Mr. Thornill has to say.

Since ancient times in the Mediterranean, castoreum was variously deployed by physicians as a cure for epilepsy, to induce abortions and to assuage the ravages of tuberculosis. It also had other properties that were suitable to a difficult-to-obtain and expensive medicinal ingredient: it could cure dementia, toothaches and gout as well as relieve headaches and fevers. (Castoreum does contain salicylic acid, the main ingredient in Aspirin, so this last was probably an accurate claim.)

Um I don’t know if aspirin can do all that, but it has its benefits surely.

That such a gentle and innocuous creature should inspire such artistic liberty seems unusual, but the money to be had from processing their pelts and castoreum was also unusual. Whether there was any empirical evidence justifying the value of castoreum is open to question. But when has fashion had anything to do with science or proof? Or even common sense? The hunt for beavers was beginning the economic transformation of a continent.

Ominous. And True. I was just reminded that there were harder times to save beavers than now. Currently we are just encouraging people to be slightly inconvenienced. 200 years ago it would have meant talking people out of their economy, their country, their freedom, their future.

 


Yesterday I listened to a very interesting webinar by WGBH in Boston which was basically author Ben Goldfarb interviewing author Judith D. Schwartz about her concept of nature using nature to heal itself. “Reindeer, Beaver, and Healing Nature With Nature”. 

He of course became a Judith fan reading “Water in plain sight” which included a section on beavers and a conversation with Brock Dolman. It was interesting to think about the role nature plays in fixing itself, even nature we’ve interfered with like Reindeer. It was even more fun seeing Ben treated like the ‘help’ instead of the famous author we all know he is. At the end the host asked them what books they were currently working and before Ben got to answer the host directed him to ask HER what she was working on.

Ben of course was a good sport and did a lot of beaver praising when he was allowed. It’s wild to think that Nature might be using wildlife to combat climate change.  From the beavers that show up in cities to the herded reindeer that stomp down the permafrost with their hooves.

Anyway it was a pretty fun listen. I don’t see a link to it but I’ll let you know if its online, Meanwhile there’s plenty of ordinary beaver headlines to keep us busy.

This headline in particular from a resource company made me snort my orange juice.

How Dangerous Is the Beaver?

With their oversized front teeth, beady little eyes and funny flat tails, beavers look less like crazed killers and more like the goofballs of the woods. Yet with their distinctive orange-colored incisors, these furry wonders can slash through a finger-sized tree branch with just a single chomp. So that begs the question: Are beavers dangerous to humans?

It turns out that yes, in certain circumstances, beavers might harm people and pets. But the truth is that beaver attacks make great headlines for one reason — they are incredibly rare.

“Beavers in the wild are not considered dangerous,” emails Michael Callahan, president of the Beaver Institute, which works to reduce beaver-human conflicts using non-lethal methods. “Unless they are threatened, the most aggressive behavior beavers will exhibit is slapping their paddle tail on the water to create a loud noise.”

I’ve been talking to reporters about beavers a while now, Mike. But I have to ask, how does one land such a prodigious beaver interview?

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