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

Category: Beavers elsewhere


Anyone who’s ever made an offer to a two year old knows this rule.

You want them to FEEL like they have a choice and get to call all the shots. But because you happen to be the adult and know better you want to actually put your thumb on the scale and determine which option they are going to pick. It’s called stacking the deck, Like “Would you like to wear a sweater or your snow gear to play at Martin’s house?”

They win. You winner. It’s a perfect system.

Which bring us to Lyme Connecticut, the state still trying to solve its beaver problem.

82-Year-Old Old Lyme Resident Faces Loss of Home as Local Officials Consider Response to Flooding

OLD LYME — For more than a year David Berggren’s house has been sinking, and Black Hall Pond has been steadily rising due to beaver activity downstream, flooding his lawn, and dock, causing his plumbing to fail and mold to grow, and shifting the foundation underneath his home on Boughton Road.

“I trapped three beavers on town property near Whippoorwill Road,” said Robert Comtois, the trapper hired by the town, “but they may not have been the suspects. I did try to get back into the opposite bank of Black Hall Pond, but it was so thickly grown-in, I was having a tough time even with my kayak.”

So there can be a drowning 82 year old man or there can be beavers. Which one do you think we should save? We first read about this problem back in June. So you can see they’re tacking this issue with lightening speed. It’s funny because you’d think that was if your property was under a little bit of water in the summer it would be under a LOT of water by January.

I remember it because of the disease. That must be fun to explain to tourists.

Despite the efforts of Machnik, town officials, members of the Open Space Commission and the Old Lyme Land Trust have for months denied knowing either location of the beaver activity responsible for flooding the property of Berggren and his neighbors, or ownership of the land.

“All we know is it’s not on our property,” said Amanda Blair at a December 13 meeting of Old Lyme’s Open Space Commission. “To the best of our knowledge, there is no beaver dam located on the Jericho Preserve,” said Michael Kiernan, president of the Old Lyme Land Trust, in a December phone call with CT Examiner. “We worked with the DEEP expert in 2017 to determine this. At that time, it was determined that the dam was located on one of the private properties to the north of the preserve.”

Two years later, Berggren, Machnik, Comtois and several Black Hall Pond area residents maintain that the dam is clearly located downstream on Bucky Brook, deep in the Jericho Preserve.

Kiernan said an investigation is ongoing.

So they don’t KNOW where the dam is that’s causing the problem but they just keep randomly killing every beaver they see because they hope it will help. That’s like not knowing who robbed the bank but just jailing every person you meet on that street until the atm’s fill up again.

Gosh. Connecticut really is – um – challenged when it comes to beavers.

On December 16, newly-elected First Selectman Tim Griswold said the town would look into using a drone to locate the beaver dam and to determine the responsibility for the flooding.

Two weeks into January, there has been no apparent progress toward resolving the issue.

In multiple conversations with town officials, it has been assumed that only the property owner may authorize the trapping or managing of beavers — in this instance, it appears, the Old Lyme Land Trust. According to both Machnik, and the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, as a matter of law that is not the case.

You know what state Connecticut borders? Massachusetts. The town of Lyme is about  75 miles away from Mike Callahan at beaver solutions. He could tell which – if any – beaver dams is causing the property to flood, And fix it for you without killing beavers or complaining to the press for 6 months.

But that would be too easy, right? Better to keep killing beavers and sinking lower into the mire.

 


Is it me or is 2o2o suddenly looking like a very busy year.

I have all these deadlines that I think, oh I don’t have to worry about that until January and then it’s JANUARY 13th!!!! Practically half way through the month and I have SO much to do. The presentation for beaverCon and the application for the community foundation grant and good LORD then all the begging for donations to the auction,

I’ll never, never be done in time. Let’s stop thinking about it and go to Connecticut.

Beaver trapping season underway; some CT residents don’t like it

NORFOLK — Roger Johnson and his wife were hiking near Haystack Mountain State Park when they came upon a young beaver caught in a steel trap near a small pond and instinctively went to investigate.

They freed the animal.

“Something didn’t look quite right and it was because one of the yearlings was caught in a steel jaw leg hold trap, splashing around trying to free itself,” Johnson said, describing what occurred Dec. 28 as the couple walk across the south dam between Barbour Woods and Haystack Mountain and observed beavers swimming below.

A hero! Is the town throwing a parade? Did the mayor give him the keys the city. Did they dedicate December 28 as national Roger Johnson day?

Of course not.

Johnson was charged with springing the trap and the incident prompted him to plan to petition the legislature to change the types of traps allowed in the state, a local lawmaker to investigate the issue further and the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection to affirm trapping as necessary in the state.

Of course he was charged. No good deed goes unpunished they say. Especially no beaver good deed. Interesting quote from the department of Environmental Protection.

“Trapping is a gruesome activity, but the traps are designed to kill the animal quickly,” he said. “I don’t know what pond (Johnson) was referring to but it was probably legal to trap there. He was very lucky he didn’t get injured releasing the beaver. Those traps will take your hand right off. Or, the beaver can bite you, or they’ll wack you with their tail. That can cause some damage too.”

Williams said hasn’t heard of many people releasing a beaver as Johnson did.

“It’s rare that a person is able to free a beaver,” he said. “As for finding traps, the trapping community itself tries to stay out of the limelight. You rarely hear about trappers in Connecticut, because they know it’s a hot topic. People don’t like to see it. It’s in the best interest of the trapper to keep a low profile. And people rarely fool around with someone else’s traps.”

I agree with you whole-heartedly, sir. Trapping is a gruesome activity. And by your own rules this trap obviously failed because a beaver was NOT killed instantly and somebody rescued it. What on EARTH does killing beavers have to do with protecting the environment, anyway? Putting Deep in charge of regulating traps is like putting Exxon in charge of counting oiled birds. It’s like putting your drunk cousin in charge of controlling the liquor cabinet. It’s like putting your randma in charge of sexting memes.

When the couple found the beaver that day at the end of December, Johnson said, the trap was strong and had the animal in its grip.

“It was just a vise, with two sides, and the beaver was in it,” he said. “It wasn’t like an old-school bear trap with teeth, but it was metal and very strong. It broke a stick in half.”

The couple said the neighboring property owners near the pond were watching the scene, and came out to investigate. “The neighbors we talked to were furious,” Johnson said. “They also have dogs, and one of them swims in that pond … they said ‘That could easily have been our dog.’”

Johnson and Hannelová waited with the little beaver until it was dark, and then put it in some tall grass near the water’s edge. When they returned the next day, the beaver was gone.

“We saw a little blood trail in the grass leading to the pond, so maybe it went back in the water … we didn’t see it anywhere,” Johnson said.

Wait, they left the beaver? After all that they just left him there? They didn’t bring him to animal rehab. Or put him in a box by the stove? Let me see what wildlife rescue was the closest. Two counties over in Granby or Sharon. Either one would take a little beaver. The state’s the size of a postage stamp so it would be a half hour in either direction.

But sure, I guess. You took a photo with your camera and started a petition. And sat with the bleeding little beaver for a while. Yeah?

We saw a little blood trail in the grass leading to the pond, so maybe it went back in the water … we didn’t see it anywhere,” Johnson said.

He called the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection to let them know what happened, “and to check if these traps were legally set,” he said. “The next morning, an environmental officer named Ed Norton returned my phone call to inform me that my actions were illegal. I was charged with criminal mischief for removing the beaver and disabling the steel traps.”

The officer told Johnson that, when a person finds an animal in a trap, they are not allowed to touch it or move it, and they should contact the state’s wildlife division if they have questions.

Points for follow up. You picked up the phone and turned yourself in. That’s something, Maybe you really weren’t sure what to do. That’s okay. The people in charge aren’t either.

Lawmakers

Rep. Maria Horn said she has received a number of calls about beaver trapping, and the types of traps that are being used.

“I’ve taken some calls from people in the last few days, and we have investigated a law banning these kinds of traps,” she said. “We got a lot of pushback, so we’ve put it off for another day.

“In the interim, I need to do research on the traps themselves. Massachusetts has banned these types of traps in favor of another type, and they are used under water, so they’re not a danger to dogs. That’s something I’m going to look into,” she said.

Horn’s biggest concern is safety for everyone. “My concern is that trapping is done in an appropriate location,” she said. “Are there other alternatives for the kinds of traps that are used, is another concern. And obviously, there’s a concern about the humanity of trapping. If a representative from the DEEP is out there, doing their job to explain what’s permissible and what isn’t, then that will make a difference. But the location is important.”

Hey, I have an idea! How about the NO TRAPPING idea? You know the one where you actually SOLVE the problem instead of killing it.  I’m just thinking out loud here but maybe you could give a flow device a try before you bring in the guillotine?

Sen. Craig Miner, R-30, is a longtime outdoorsman who has discussed the issue of trapping animals before.

“We’ve had legislation proposed on trapping and the types of traps, and last year, we had a very long public hearing about it,” he said. “We concluded that it would be difficult for humans and wildlife to live together if the beaver population increased. That includes nuisance wildlife in particular, and beavers could fall into that category.”

Funny thing senator. There are a finite number of places for a beaver to live in a postage stamp state like yours. And beavers are territorial so they will keep out anyone who there isn’t space for. When your trap-happy buddies take a family of beavers OUT space for a new family opens up. Like those vending machines that drop cokes when you put in your money.

By trapping out families you actually make more space for new families to come – Increasing the number of beavers in Connecticut in a constant vending machine of take and replace.

And since your state is surrounded with other postage stamps they have lots of choices about how to get there. Four states share a border with Connecticut. And beavers don’t need passports. Take out the Jones and the Smith family will just swim on over. Take out the Smith’s and the Lincoln’s will be on standby. And so on. And so on.

But HEY, if you put in a flow device and actually SOLVED the problem instead of making a hole in it, the next family that tried to move in would get discouraged and have to keep looking for  the unoccupied space of their dreams. Actually making a stable population instead of a constantly refilling one. Gosh.

“Every time I see a beaver (dead) on the side of the road, I think, ‘Oh my God, how awful that must have been,’” he said. “But if I see one in a trap, I don’t feel that way. Trapping seems to be the most logical tool; it seems to be the most well-thought out process so far. And there are always advancements in the mechanisms that people use. The steel trap is a much quicker piece of equipment (to eliminate beavers) but it doesn’t work in all settings, which is why there are a number of different (traps). People who know what they’re doing will use the proper mechanism.”

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I hardly know where to begin. I have started this sentence a thousand different ways with a hundred different profane insults.  You feel sad when you see a beaver hit by a car but NOT when you see a beaver killed in a trap?

Of course you know they both result in death and are probably not that different for the beaver. A metal thing comes out of nowhere making a big noise and then you die. I’m pretty sure that’s how a beaver sees it. I’m not sure there’s any real distinction. Well, your lungs don’t burst when you’re hit by a car I guess. But other than that…

But HEY I know one big difference and correct me if I’m wrong on this. You’ve actually SEEN beavers hit by cars on your way to the capital, senator.  But you’ve  never actually SEEN a beaver dangling lifelessly in a conibear.  Because those things happen out of sight. And you know what they say. Out of sight. Out of mind.

Please never leave me alone in an elevator with this man. It’s not safe for him.

“I understand why people feel the way they do about trapping, but the state does everything it can to make it work and to control the number of beavers,” he said. “It’s all done for a reason, and it’s not as comforting for some people. But without trapping, there would be many more.”

Oh can you understand? You sympathetic hypocritical  double talker. You understand NOTHING. Even the reporter had to go all the way back to 2014 to find a positive article about beavers.

In another story reported by CBC Canada radio, “Beavers are dam important to the ecosystem,” beaver habitats prevent water temperatures from rising, which protects fish like salmon and trout, restores river systems, and over time protect the impact of evaporating water on farmland and open space.

I had no idea this was going to be such a marathon article when it started. This reporter needs a copy of Ben’s book, stat!

Trapping is the best way to manage beavers, the DEEP said. “In situations when the presence of beavers cannot be tolerated, or the landowner wishes to control the number of beavers on his property, trapping during the regulated winter trapping season is the most effective solution,” the DEEP said. “Licensed trappers will often voluntarily assist landowners by harvesting beaver during the trapping season.”

Who is the sympathetic figure in this story? No, seriously. I’m asking. It’s not the guy who freed the beaver so it could die slowly. And it’s not the senator who hates seeing dead beavers on the road but loves to see them in traps. Or the DEEP officer who thinks beavers have infinite powers and must be stopped. I’m not even sure its the reporter. who read something nice about them in 2014. Maybe I wouldn’t like people in Connecticut that much. I mean honestly even the state park is paying to trap beavers on public lands. What’s up with that?


The good news is that yesterday I found out how I will remotely present at beaverCon 2020 and I will be able to use video and audio, which means I could start pull together tools for both, I’m happy to say that the very old laptop still functions and I myself functionenough to put everything on the new laptop – so things are looking hopeful.

While I was searching through what to share I came across this national treasure of our beavers in 2017 from Moses Silva and thought you’d want to see. Turn your sound WAY up to hear my favorite part.

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Aren’t beavers the most lovely and wonderful thing you can ever hope to see? This video just about puts my entire life in prospective. And we’re not the only one who knows this. Apparently the director of Wildlife guardians, John Horning, is a big fan too.

Beckoning the Beavers — Wild Earth Guardians

I love beavers. Ever since I was a kid and watched them slap their tails defiantly, and loudly, to warn their clan of the threatening presence of large animals, I’ve thought beavers were worthy of my admiration. Then I realized they build dams too! As an aspiring dam builder myself, I figured beavers had more than a few things to teach me.

In fact, when the question of what is my favorite spirit animal arises, my response is almost always: beavers. They bring joy and gusto to their daily work and are quite content in mud and water. What’s not to admire?

Preaching to the choir here, sir.

So, when the opportunity came up in late September to be a beaver for a day with WildEarth Guardians’ restoration crew, I jumped at it—especially since I could bring along my energetic, six-year-old twin boys.

The job of building these beaver dam analogues, or BDAs as they are known, was made easier by the placement of two dozen wooden posts that had been driven into the ground in a cross-crossed pattern across the stream. These posts, placed days earlier by Reid and his crew, provided the necessary foundation for each dam to rise

And so a beaver clan, a crew of five or six people, was deployed to each of the six dam sites. For my boys—as it seemed for everyone—the excitement of the reality of dam-building overrode the hesitation that often comes with trying something new. In partnership with the other adults, the boys wove the willow back and forth between the poles and watched as others did the same.

Without it really being emphasized we had already embodied one of the critical qualities of beavers: collaboration amongst a family unit to accomplish a grand task.

Oh my goodness. I love his enthusiasm. And I love the idea of children weaving branches in a BDA. Hmm beaver festival idea? It gets even better.

Absent cows, there would be willows along the stream. And almost everywhere there are willows, beavers thrive. And where beavers thrive there is ecological dynamism, and the land sings, with the literal songs of flycatchers and frogs and with the slithering of snakes and the pattering of shrews and mice. And in the stream itself, native trout grow fatter and more abundant in the cooler, deeper waters that beaver dams create.

Here in New Mexico, there is a long list of endangered species that have been imperiled in the absence of beavers and that would benefit from their return. The New Mexico meadow jumping mouse, the Rio Grande cutthroat trout, the Southwest willow flycatcher are just a few.

Ahhh that does a heart good to read. You know WildEarth Guardians has the right idea.

The next morning after packing up, we were about to get in the car when my boys proclaimed that we could not leave without one more inspection of “our” beaver dam. Much to their satisfaction, not only was the dam still intact, but the water level had risen noticeably since the previous afternoon. As their energy lingered, the boys hummed, gently sang, and chattered to themselves and to each other in contemplative satisfaction with their work. One walked back and forth across the dam while the other waded in and out of the now waist-deep water. Without further words, we headed back up stream and up the hill to our car. But before moving on, one of my boys said, “Dad, we need to come back and build more beaver dams!”

“Yes, we do,” I said. “Yes, we do.”

Yes. And you need to MAKE WAY FOR BEAVERS so they can build and maintain their own dams without your help. Step aside and let the experts take over. This work is more tricky than  it looks. Just check out this video Robin of Napa shared on facebook. Experts are really picky about getting just the right materials.

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It’s a funny thing. You make a fancy ravioli dinner for 12 of your closest beaver friends and you spend the evening chatting about the first East Coast beaver conference or repeated train rides to sacramento to get the governor to back the right legislation or countless meetings with the watershed association and fish and game to replant creek or remastering the renaissance style of painting directly with eggshell and you feel like the world is pretty  close to getting it right. It’s all within reach, and you are sitting with the right group of people to reach it.

And then you get up in the morning and read an article like this, and realize how far we truly have left to travel.

Beavers create travel headache for southeast Muhlenberg residents

MUHLENBERG COUNTY, Ky. (1/3/20) — The beaver population in southeastern Muhlenberg County has created a dam issue along Mud River Union Road.

There are approximately 50 residents who live at the end of the county road, where a nearby creek flows into Mud River. It appears water is across a section of the road about a half-mile leading to the homes, which makes travel difficult.

Muhlenberg County Judge-Executive Curtis McGehee said this week that the issue was brought to his attention during his tenure as sheriff a few months ago. He is speaking to road department officials and magistrates about hiring a beaver trapping expert to help remedy the issue.

Until the beavers are under control in that area, there’s not a whole lot officials can do.

It takes a judge to kill a beaver in Kentucky? 

Well, I guess a flow device is right out then, your honor? I mean if you’re going to falsely incarcerate thousands, bemoan the closing coal plants  and shut down all the women’s clinics, then progressively managing beavers is impossible. Right?

Too bad for Muhlenberg. Because this whole flooding this is going to happen again. Soon.



It’s been a year hasn’t it? I can’t believe we get to live through the 20’s again!!! I’m sure my house is happy. The story goes it had a flapper daughter at one time who could drive her own fliver! There’s a nice letter from Tom Russert about the Sonoma beavers and I pulled together some annual highlights in case you wonder what happened to us and beavers in 2019. Have fun tonight! Kiss someone at midnight and don’t make any promises you can’t keep.

What to do about beavers and otters in Sonoma Creek

Advice to Sonoma City and CO government officials and agencies by local “citizen scientists”: beavers build dams. Otters live in Sonoma Creek as well but do not build dams.

 Cutting a notch, will simply engage the beaver to repair the damage in no time. Putting in a “pond leveler,” also known as a beaver deceiver, will allow water flow management and the beavers with their dam can stay in the channel/creek and be enjoyed by all. This simple inexpensive device has been employed in nearby cities since 2008, inexpensive to build, and requires little, if any, maintenance over time. CDFW, agencies, and government officials are clearly in catch up mode on this subject.
 

These devices have been successfully employed on Alhambra Creek and throughout the country where urban beaver habitats occur. At least our government didn’t explode the dam and exterminate as many cities typically do. Beaver habitats, managed properly, enhance habitat for a wide variety of species including birdlife, fish populations, and humans. Beaver can help in groundwater recharge. We need to co-exist with them and it is easy when we work smart with a little planning and effort.  There have been several expert panel discussions and nature lectures in Sonoma on these very subjects over the past decade. Beavers, like mountain lions, bears, badgers, otters and birds are often misunderstood. As for beavers, there are several youtube videos of pond levelers if you want to see how they can make an appreciable difference.

Fire, ready aim…. Experts? Biologists? Mitigations? OK? Permission to notch a beaver dam? Misidentifying with great authority the animals and wildlife impact and not employing the obvious well know beaver damn habitat solutions long ago? A solution successfully employed across the west coast for years. An informed citizen pretty much hit the nail on the head. Why would Sonoma County officials not turn to the City of Martinez, a major beaver city success story in America since 2008 on this challenging subject of managing urban beaver habitats?

Responsible stewardship of beaver habitats has been known to educate and bring communities together. John Muir once said, “when we try to pick out anything by itself we find it hitched to everything else in the universe.”  Sonoma is a community of informed citizens known to “Celebrates Our Good Nature”. Thank you Mother Nature for reminding us of our responsibility. This will be a good community test in the months to come.

Tom Rusert is the co-founder of Sonomanature.org

Aww, thanks Tom! Happy New Year to you and Darren, and remember to think about beavers in the twenties!

December:
FIGHTING FIRE WITH EMILY AND BEAVERS

MARTINEZ SHOWS OXFORD A DAM GOOD TIME

November:

LAWSUIT PROPOSES E.P.I.C. CHANGES IN BEAVER TRAPPING

MARTINEZ BEAVERS CELEBRATE THEIR 12th ANNIVERSARY

October:

B.C. HERO FEEL-GOOD BEAVER TAIL

THE MARTINEZ BEAVERS INSPIRE THESIS AT HUMBOLDT STATE

September:

MARTINEZ BEAVERS LOSE HEROIC WILDLIFE VOICE

B.R.A.V.O. BEAVER RELOCATION EFFORT IN CALIFORNIA

MARTINEZ BEAVERS GO TO ROSSMOOR

August:

BEAVERS AND SOLUTIONS ON NPR

BEAVER BENEFITS IN NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

July:

IN WHICH WE DISCOVER LASSIE LOVES BEAVERS

MARTINEZ BEAVERS ON MUSE ECOLOGY PODCAST

June:

12th BEAVER FESTIVAL IS A HUGE SUCCESS!

EXCITING ADVOCACY FOR BEAVERS IN THE UK

May:

NAPA CONTINUES TO POUR GOOD NEWS FOR BEAVERS

BEAVER EMOJI COMING SOON!

April:

BEAVERS AND SALMON AT JOHN MUIR BIRTHDAY

AMAZING FOOTAGE UNCOVERED OR OUR BEAVERS

March:

A NEW BEAVER FRIEND WELCOMES BEN WITH A RAP FOR BEAVERS

MARTINEZ BEAVERS GO TO AUDUBON

February:

WORTH A DAM RECEIVES A DONATION FROM OUR INSPIRATION

BEAVERS GET FAMOUS FIGHTING FIRES

January:

BEAVER DETECTIVES IN SAN DIEGO

HEIDI PERRYWEATHER FROM MARIN?

Martinez Gazette on KPFA last night, in the seattle times and the LA times. End of an era.

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