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

Category: Beaver-themed merchandise

These are unusual beaver-themed designed merchandise we like. Some of the items have been donated to Worth A Dam, and some we just hope they will be soon.


Capture

Castoro Cellars has been very kind to us in the past, and this year they’ve donated two weekend passes to their Beaverstock event and a tshirt for the occasion! If you are interested in some fine wine, fine music and excellent company you should bring your checkbook to the silent auction and make sure to bid!

  •  This is an all ages event but you must be 21+ to purchase alcoholic beverages. Children 10 and under are free with a paid adult ticket. All others must have a ticket to enter the event. Tickets are not “in and out” so once you come please plan on staying for the duration.
  • Bring a low back lawn chair or blanket to enjoy the concerts! No seating provided.
  • Food and wine will be available for purchase. No outside food or beverages allowed.
  • Admission ticket (one day or two day) includes complimentary parking and a full day of live music! 

Holy guacamole bat man, it’s starting to look like we’re having a beaver festival! Enjoy the soothing layout and delineated lines because all to soon it will become a clutter of children, parents and teens visiting the booths and learning why beavers matter. I decided we needed street names because it is too confusing to tell people where to go, and I like the idea that they are named for our beaver works, not for our guests! We definitely have a full house this year and now I’m off to find whether they city will let us mark spaces with some kind of removable chalk!

The River Otter Ecology folks (Wildlife Row, west) launched this video last night which is a very clever use of their trail cams and is sure to get lots of hits. Go give them some beaver love and pass it on.

And just in case you aren’t sure now…


Let’s start with surprises. How about this throwaway paragraph from the Syracuse outdoor writer David Figura

Figura writing about beavers

Meanwhile, here’s what I’ve been working on for this week: An interview with Dietland Muller-Schwarze, a retired SUNY ESF prof and nationally recognized expert on the subject of beavers. He’s written two books about them and in 2007 was given a lifetime achievement award by the U.S. Department of Agriculture for his 25 years of research on the animal.

If you’re at all like me your first thought on reading this passage is not “Cool! I can’t wait for that interview!” or ” Finally! beaver appreciation spreading through New York” but rather, huh? “USDA gives lifetime achievement awards”? I honestly only thought they recognized ‘deathtime’ achievements! And they gave this award to the most powerful, convincing beaver advocate on the planet? Wait, I need to sit down! Everything is spinning.

Sadly if USDA truly did this noble thing, they are clearly ashamed of it, because I can’t find a single reference to it in the enormity of the Google except for his resume and this article. Hmm, I shall investigate.

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And now for something completely different, this lovely passage from Jo Marshall the author of the Twigs stories who was asked to share what she learned about water management and beavers for the educational blog by Jacqueline Rhoades because of her very successful Twig stories and the giant beaver character, Slapper. Enjoy!

The first Twig Stories novel – Leaf & the Rushing Waters – is about a young, boyish Twig named Leaf whose old tree home is inundated by a glacial outburst flood. His family is trapped high in the Old Seeder’s knothole. Leaf and his Twig friend Rustle set off to find a goliath beaver named Slapper, who can build a mighty dam to block the raging torrent. What I love about Twig Stories is the opportunity to blend science fact into fantasy. The idea that Slapper and his colony could build such an enormous and effective dam comes from an actual beaver dam in Alberta, Canada. It is twice the length of Hoover Dam and can be seen from space!

The key message in ‘Rushing Waters’ is beavers are natural control agents to mitigate extreme flood and drought. Many wildlife nonprofits have made it clear beaver dams are effective tools for flood control, if allowed to flourish. In many areas, beavers were trapped and hunted to nonexistence, so beaver advocates are dedicated to the reintroduction of beavers into those areas now suffering from disastrous flood and drought due to climate shifts.In spite of those who believe beavers are a nuisance, many nonprofit groups and researchers have shown that the impact of drought is actually reduced since beaver dams allow a controlled, consistent stream of filtered water during long periods of hot weather. These periods are growing longer and hotter all the time.

Another critical theme in ‘Rushing Waters’ is we must protect endangered animals. Beaver dams help create healthy ponds and wetlands, which save threatened species such as salamanders, frogs, birds, and small mammals from extinction. This benefits large predators, too. Nonprofit organizations with passionate beaver defenders such as The Lands Council , Martinez Beavers.org, and Beavers: Wetlands and Wildlife  have developed excellent methods to allow communities to coexist with beavers in their parks and private lands. If necessary, humane relocation of nuisance beavers should be utilized rather than trapping or killing these remarkable, helpful creatures.

This post from Jo Marshall was originally featured on the Jacqueline Rhoades education blog. What I really enjoy about this column is the fact that it makes “Beaver Advocates” seem like a real thing – a voting block- like baby boomers or code pink. As if we were a growing force to be reckoned with. Well, okay then! Jo’s website and next projects can be visited here. She generously donated several copies of her books to the silent auction last year which were all promptly sold. Thanks Jo for taking on such a great subject!


You know what they say, Once is an accident. Twice is a coincidence. And three times is a trend.

This year has the mysterious fortune of beginning on a grisly note where beaver carcasses are being featured on the front page from Alberta to Idaho. If 2012 was the year of the rabid beaver, 2013 seems to be the year of the mangled beaver. Hopefully this is a fad that has had its 15 minutes, but we may see more of this before the year is through.

The day I nailed a frozen beaver carcass to a tree

It started last month with the Calgary Herald’s article about nailing frozen beaver to a tree in the hopes of attracting the elusive wolverine.  I remarked at the time that what if Wolverines were attracted to puppies? Would they still run a photo of a skinned one nailed to a tree on the front page?

Mirjam hammered two large nails into the [beaver] carcass, tied a string around it to haul it up the tree and climbed up the tree to start pounding it in place. Then she jumped down, handed the hammer to me and asked me to finish the task.

So that’s how I came to nail a frozen, skinned beaver to a tree. Ah, the glamorous life of a journalist.

A few weeks later a story ran about a traumatized cycler in British Columbia who had ridden upon a dead beaver whose tail had been cut off. Mind you, there are plenty of places in the world where they pay a bounty for beaver tails, so maybe it was an act of free enterprise. Because all news must be reported a photo of that beaver also ran on the front page.

BEAVER BUTCHERED

Bonita Carey and Megan Keene were riding their bikes on Errington Road Friday afternoon when they saw a sight that changed the tone of their whole day.

In the ditch at the side of the road lay a dead, mature beaver — with its tail hacked off.

The pair were horrified by what they saw.

“This is absolutely sickening, Carey said. “The fact that they butchered its tail off just makes me cringe. It’s atrocious. What if a family rode by?”

Or what if someone opened their newspaper? Maybe you can explain to me why if something is too horrible for people to see they would put it in the paper so that more people could be horrified by it?

And now a third story is reported from Idaho where a skinned beaver is being used again as Lynx bait.

Volunteers help in study of NW reclusive critters

Lynx have been documented as residents of the Purcells. Researchers can confirm individuals returning to an area through the year by fur markings captured in the photos and DNA snagged by brass gun-cleaning brushes fixed to the trees below the beaver bait.

An Oregon trapper provides the neatly skinned and cut beaver carcasses as a byproduct of his legal trapping operation, Lucid said. “We get a few at a time and stockpile

One has to feel that this wave of species insensitivity is tricking down from the northern climes like snowmelt and will reach California any minute. I recognize that reporting on this trend will leave folks asking why I would show such upsetting things on a beloved beaver website, but I realize that in all the world, in all the animal rights groups, and in all the assembled earth defenders, this is the only place that will notice that there have been three beaver carcass stories in the past 30 days. If we don’t notice, who will?

The last story is slightly less awful, and the photo less grisly, but why on earth don’t these articles run photos like this instead?


Yesterday was literally absorbed with details about other people’s beavers. I spent the first half working on my response to the ominous Wildlife Services plan to kill 500 beavers a year in Massachusetts, and then looking up all the sympathetic players I should send it to as well. Here are my comments if you’re the kind of person who’s interested.

Then I got an email from Mary O’brien of the Grand Canyon Trust who will be holding their first-ever beaver festival in Escalante this September. Could I help with a conference call for her and her interns sometime that afternoon so they could ask me questions? There were lots of details for the festival that they needed help with. Of course, after I got over my crippling intern-envy (thinking what it would be like to have hard working brilliant grad students to help with all this) I said absolutely!

What kind of fabric did we use for the tails? Can I send her the designs for them? What kind of paint did we use? How much did we buy? Were there more children or adults at the festival? How did we teach about the Keystone Species idea? Could I send her the sheet we used for the charm bracelet? Could I give her contact info for Mike? How many shirts did we make? How did we divide the sizes? What kind of promotions did we use? How did we advertise the festival? How did you keep one child from painting over everything? Did children ever ruin community artwork?

Well, I loaded her up with information, but I actually never realized how much we did on our own until I heard Mary’s team taking notes on what I worried and puzzled out all by myself during sleepless hours between December and July every year. I had a moment of being very proud of myself, and then a moment of being very jealous when I heard they were having Sherri Tippie come out and do a lecture the night before. (Sigh) One cool idea that they came up with all on their own was to give monetary prizes for an art contest  to children, teens and adults. Winning entries will be added to a calendar for a sale next year! The entries from older contestants all need to be done on site in Utah, but little ones from all over are welcome to enter the children’s contest. Here are the rules if you have any budding artists in mind.

After seeing Saturday’s idea of how to visually explain the importance of a keystone species,

Mary found an artist who is going to work on a large scale display. We both liked the idea of having an archway people had to walk ‘through’ to get to the festival! Of course she’s still using her fantastic sound booth concept for having people tell their stories of individual beaver sightings. Honestly, the two-day affair sound like a BLAST!!!

This morning I heard from Lega working on Maine ‘Beaver Daze’.  While Mary is committed to not reinventing the wheel, Lega is a veritable wheel-inventing machine!. Here is her graphic for Sharon and Owen’s upcoming talk;

Don’t you want to be there AND Utah AND Colorado? Not to mention her design for a coupon called a ‘beaver buck’ which folks can spend for a 15% discount at participating stores that day! Smart!

Honestly, why is this darn country so big anyway? If these women were my next-door neighbors imagine what we could accomplish together! We would have the biggest, grandest most persuasive beaver festival yet! Even with all the extracurricular activity, our own festival is still coming along. This weekend I had the donated artwork framed, the t-shirts contracted, and the initial map layout completed.

Also I heard from the very generous Chris K. that he had finished our ‘plywood beaver’ silhouette for children to paint on! Imagine this with 500 birds, turtles, and otters painted in! This is about 8 feet wide and should look familiar. Recognize her?

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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Beaver Alphabet Book

TREE PROTECTION

BAY AREA PODCAST

Our story told around the county

Beaver Interactive: Click to view

LASSIE INVENTS BDA

URBAN BEAVERS

LASSIE AND BEAVERS

Ten Years

The Beaver Cheat Sheet

Restoration

RANGER RICK

Ranger rick

The meeting that started it all

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