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

Category: Who’s Killing Beavers Now?


Back in October I was contacted by Ron Chaney of Manitou Springs in Colorado  who was worried about some dam building that was going on. Since he was about a half hour drive from Sherri Tippie I put them in touch and called Sherri to follow up.

This morning’s headline tells me that good steps were taken, but not unfortunately not enough to save those beavers.

Beavers drive a wedge between Manitou Springs environmentalists, business owners

As temperatures grew colder in Manitou Springs, the arrival of furry, buck-toothed neighbors drove a wedge between some business owners and residents.
An unusual influx of beaver activity in recent months cost the town some of its most prized trees. And as some wildlife lovers sought to find a solution that didn’t involve harming the hungry creek-dwellers, Evelyn Waggoner, the owner and operator of Green Willow Motel Cottages, took matters into her own hands.

Waggoner called Alpine Wildlife Control in early November to trap and euthanize three of the beavers.

City Councilor Becky Elder, an environmentalist who’s admired the species since childhood — when she says she earned the nickname “Becky Beaver” — was crushed.

“Some of us … get our hearts broken, because we care,” she says. “… It’s a lot bigger than just a beaver or three dead beavers.”

This should serve as a painful reminder to all of us. Even when there’s a will, a local advocate, a supportive city council member, and a nearby beaver expert, everything can so very quickly come to an end. The default position is always to kill beavers.

Sherri Tippie, president of Denver-based nonprofit WildLife2000, had a slightly different take when she came to the city pool and fitness center to share her expertise with a group of Manitou residents on Nov. 6.

“Beaver are coming back to the areas where they belong,” Tippie said.

She’s been working with beavers for decades, live-trapping and relocating them (she always advises keeping families together) and educating humans on how to live in harmony with them.

A handout she provided for information session attendees says beavers benefit ecosystems by creating wetlands, preventing erosion, promoting biodiversity and improving water quality and quantity. Notably, for Manitou: “A network of beaver dams can help reduce high flows and downstream flooding.”

I don’t know about you but I get a happy, happy feeling seeing Sherri on the front lines with her wonderful drawer displays which show a fantastic model of a castor master and beaver deceiver, as well as some truly adorable clay beavers she made herself. It’s too bad the lives of these beavers couldn’t be saved, but inroads were made. Baby steps.

Integral to that plan: Roy Chaney, the city pool’s director of aquatics and fitness, who’s been heading efforts to educate the public about beavers since the handiwork of “Manny the Beaver” appeared in the pond next to the pool about a month and a half ago. (Chaney’s invitation brought Tippie and Aaron Hall, a representative of Defenders of Wildlife, to talk about mitigation strategies.)

Chaney hopes that one day, with Council’s support, Schryver Park might host nature day camps where students can learn about beavers’ benefits to the environment.

Chaney was delighted to see that on the morning of Nov. 9, about half of the scraps of wood Tippie told him to leave by the pond had been added to Manny’s dam. He says Defenders of Wildlife is providing a camera to place by the dam and hopefully catch Manny in action.

Hey Ron, keep an eye out and maybe Manny will stick around. Saving beavers is hard, hard work and takes more time than many of us ever dreamed possible. I will write the good folks at Manitou springs and give them some ideas about how to coordinate a better outcome with all the players next time. They are very, very close.

Here’;s another hard worker we know very well, who stepped in to save some beavers that couldn’t be saved and found her life changed because of it.

Beavers: Humanity’s natural ally in combating climate change?

Sherry Guzzi wasn’t thinking about climate change eight years ago when she set out to save a family of beavers living near her Lake Tahoe, California, home.

A former architect and lifelong wildlife lover, Guzzi was mostly thinking it was just plain wrong to kill animals seeming not to be causing any real harm. She was also thinking about the preschool next door: children there were rallying around their unofficial mascots, hoping to spare the nettlesome beavers from “removal,” the benign term that for many California beavers means death.

Beavers, ‘a critical landscape-scale force of nature,’ and a resource in combating global warming?

But strong community support didn’t save that beaver family back in 2010. Guzzi says the highway department arranged to have the beavers’ lodge and dam destroyed, leaving the family of four with no protection. “The parents were trying to make a little mud dam so the babies would have a safe place, but then [the crew] came again and shot them in the night,” Guzzi recalled on a recent phone call. “It was very discouraging and just so unnecessarily sad.”

Sherry Guzzi! It’s wonderful to see this article starting with your stories. A rising tide raises all boats, but you’ve received too little afterglow from the publication of Ben’s wonderbook.  I so remember the early days of grim beaver rescue when our own Lori traveled to Tahoe to talk to folks about how to live with beavers. Seems like a million years ago.

For her part, Guzzi says she was inspired by the ordeal to launch a nonprofit organization, the Sierra Wildlife Coalition, dedicated to helping people co-exist with beavers and other wildlife in the Tahoe basin. The organization now has a couple hundred members and a core team of dedicated volunteers. Guzzi has also become a self-avowed “beaver believer” – a growing community, she says.

Yes, crack open the lid on this story just a little, and you’ll find that a whole world of passionate beaver devotees indeed exists. And they are capturing more attention. Beavers and the humans who love them have claimed a starring role in Beaver Believers, a new documentary that’s turning heads on the film fest circuit, and also in a critically acclaimed new book, Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter, by Ben Goldfarb. Beavers are figuring into dozens of media hits, and also in a PBS series.

So what’s inspiring this fan base to grow, despite long-held beliefs that beavers are nothing more than a nuisance? In a word, hope. Because as it turns out, these natural engineers may well be humans’ natural allies in efforts to confront climate change.

Here begins yet ANOTHER wonderful review of Ben’s book and the good things beavers can do if we let them. I got all excited when I read that sentence about the “PBS Series” but the author was just referring to the Nature documentary from a few years ago.

Sigh. I wish there was a whole series just about beavers!

Until that lucky day you’ll have to make do with little old me. In the meantime, hurray for our beaver saving friends Ron and Sherry who stepped into the murky waters of beaver advocacy and didn’t get the outcome they wanted, but  because of their brave actions made it easier for so many others to follow their lead and make a difference.


Happy Independence day! You know, that important celebration of our country’s birth that came when we severed all ties with the tyrant that cruelly ruled us with his constant barbaric tweeting and insistence on locking up babies. Oops! Wrong tyrant! (You gotta admit, the pirates we have now make the tea tax seem pretty quaint by comparison).

I’ve been hard at work finishing up silent auction items and trying to fix the website, which seems to have lost its cool little share-on-facebook gizmo on July 1st. All I can think is that the since the gizmo upgraded that day, it can no longer talk to our existing website, so it doesn’t work like it used to. I’m still hoping for a fix any time soon.

I don’t know in what kind of beaver-saving bubble you’ve been since the festival. but I woke up today with three emails in my inbox from a homeowner in Nevada I wrote about at the end of 2016. The emails were titled “Your Ignorant Post” so of course they peaked my curiosity because I was eager to see to which of my ignorant posts she was referring.

Turns out it was the one where I commented that beavers were saving water against the will of the homeowner and NDOW gave her a permit to trap them.

Given her worries we’re surprised by nothing in this article but THIS:

Jessica Heitt, the Nevada Department of Wildlife Urban Wildlife Coordinator, said the only option to remove beavers is to hire a professional to trap them. It’s open season from Oct. 1 through April 30.

“If it’s outside of the season they have to apply for a depredation permit,” Heitt said.

“We would usually go out and investigate the area and go and make sure there’s a significant amount of damage before we ever issue a permit.”

Can that possibly be true? Did Jessica make a mistake? Does Napa REALLY send a NDOW worker out to see whether a depredation permit is warranted? How oh how did that policy get started and when can California adopt it please? I’m pretty sure all you have to do to get a depredation permit in California is check a box or pick up the phone. Could nevada really go out for every request?

It’s true I wrote a few lines at the beginning about the homeowner, but the real point of this post was the fact that NDOW sends someone out to SEE if a depredation permit is needed. I was fully impressed and wondered how we could implement such a practice in California.

Let’s just say the home owner wasn’t impressed with my impression, and wrote me that they had been infested by mosquitoes and the trapper had taken out 300 beavers from her little creek. And my type really makes her sick, You can imagine the rest. This isn’t out first rodeo..

Since hoards of angry animal rights activists are not in fact reading this site every day or standing by with torches and pitchforks awaiting their marching orders, the nearest I can think is that her story was also on the local news, (which is how I learned about it) and riled some folks. I guess she is still getting glared at in the grocery store because of it to this day.

Really, when you think about it, it’s kind of sweet that she thinks I did that. And that I’m a ‘type’ at all. Wouldn’t it be awesome if there were more of me?

I’m working on it.


We may have won the beaver battle in Martinez, but the war rages on. Recently the killing fields of Canada have been complaining vociferously about beavers . In fact the NWT is offering a 100 dollar reward for killing just one. That’s sure a lot of Canadian nickles.

‘Beavers all over’: N.W.T. communities place $100 bounty on Canada’s national animal

A $100 bounty has been placed on beavers in northern Northwest Territories to reduce the population of the industrious but sometimes troublesome rodents. Beaver-related complaints from various communities in the Mackenzie Delta have increased, primarily about beaver dams and lodges blocking fish-bearing creeks, flooding traditional travel routes, and destroying and disrupting habitat along the waterways of the Delta.

They’re building their dams and we can’t fish at this lake anymore or that lake — beavers all over,” said Michelle Gruben with the Aklavik Hunters and Trappers Committee. “Our hunters and trappers have been saying for a few years that beavers are a problem, we’re seeing more and more of them.”

A bounty was first tried last year but hunters and trappers complained the $50 a head didn’t make it worthwhile to cover the cost of gas to go out on the land and the hard work skinning a beaver, which is an awkward animal to skin. The bounty was boosted to $100 this year.

Hunters and trappers must turn in evidence of each kill — the skull, castor sacs and baculum (the penis bone) if it is a male.They also must show an official the stretched beaver hide or packed meat as evidence the animal is being used.

The penis bone? Seriously? The penis bone? What’s the matter? Couldn’t you think of any manlier way to encourage beaver slaughter? The penis bone?

The skull and the castor sacs really isn’t enough. You need the penis too. Those damn male beavers, having all those baby beavers. (?) Plus it’s fun for the kids. You never know what you’re going to get until you open it up!

With the ice clearing, at least 100 beavers were killed and claimed in Aklavik last week, officials said. The program is funded by the territory’s department of Environment and Natural Resources.

Until June 1o there is no limit on the number of beavers you can kill. At 100 dollar a head -er dick- that can add up. Thank goodness the entire program is being paid for by the department of the ENVIRONMENT and NATURAL RESOURCES.

Because nothing says “protecting the environment” like killing beavers.

Okay, I know we all need to take a shower and clear our heads after that horrible article. So I have just the thing. Two mornings ago Rusty Cohn of Napa happened to catch a beaver work section more wonderful than anything we’ve ever seen in Martinez. Two beavers working like gangbusters, fixing their dam with STONES.

Beaver placing stone – Rusty Cohn
Napa beaver handling stone: Rusty Cohn
Securing dam with stones: Rusty Cohn
Beaver paw stretched to hold stone: Rusty Cohn

Thank you Rusty for capturing this awesome moment and sharing it with us! I’ve seen beavers carry mud and kits in just that way, holding the bounty above their paws and under their chins, but outside of documentaries I had never really seen this happen with stones. Of course you realize you have been beaver blessed now don’t you? You have to keep watch over them forever.

Good for us!


See this pretty logo with the grasses blooming inside the ‘O’? It is for a marsh conservancy in Sacramento called the Natomas Basin Conservancy. Yes, I had never heard of them either Natomas is a Maidu word meaning “North place or Upstream of the people”

The Natomas Basin Conservancy is on the Sacramento river at the edge of the city, and “The purpose of the NBHCP is to promote biological conservation along with economic development and the continuation of agriculture within the Natomas Basin. ” As such they engage in species mitigation and replant native trees for bird use. They have a glossy. top dollar website that implores you on every page to DONATE NOW. They have a host of friends and landowning partners including folks at CDFW USDA and FWS.

And what they can’t stand is those dam beavers.

Here’s a blog post where they complain that the dam beavers are forcing them to wire wra0 replanted trees, and another where they complain that the beavers are eating the trees they planted for the Swainson’s hawk to nest.

I admit, this news upset me a bit. I had to sit on it for two days before I was ready to write about it. In the mean time I touched base with some beaver friends to ask if they knew anyone that worked there. I was given the name of what was described as a smart guy who had worked there before settling on another River Conservancy. I wrote him my concerns and asked if he might have any suggestions about who to contact or how to make approach.

He was very thoughtful and prompt. He answered that beavers were very  very destructive and maybe I might want to take some some time to learn about  the ecology of beavers at lower elevations first.


Looking at the depredation permits of 2016 it is clear we have a winner. (And lots and lots of losers.) For the first time in 5 years it’s NOT Placer. They were edged out by a nose to Sacramento. Although if you look at the number of beavers the permits were issued for, the contest is really not even close.

All told permits were issued for a total of 3,300 beavers in the state of California alone. (I doubt honestly that there are that many beaver anywhere in the state) obviously the actual totals wasn’t any where amount. I think USDA reported 696 beavers killed in 2016. Unlike everyone else they have to report actual beavers taken – not permission given. Wildlife services traps about two thirds of the beavers in the state, so I’m guessing actual take was less than half the allowable.

Still, Too Dam Many.

New this year is replacement of unlimited permits with permits for large sums, like 99 and 50.  These are usually issued to utilities, large acre parcels or water reclamation districts. They are annual customers whose names we’ve seen before. If you took out all the big agencies the stats would look a great deal different. Still, it’s a third more than last year, which was twice as many as the year before that. Each permit is issued for more beavers in nearly every county. I’m guessing this doesn’t reflect a sudden boom in the population but a shift in management policy and a wish not to have to do more paperwork.

Bright spots in yesterday’s slaughter review? How about the property manager who listed prior efforts as having used “Friendship traps”. I’m not even sure I know what that is – maybe live traps? – I’m tempted to be totally cynically and ask ‘isn’t all friendship a trap, really?” The other bright spot you can see yourself on the graph if you look very very closely.

One permit issued for San Bernandino County!

Victorville, where the permit was issued, is about an hour west of Los Angeles. If you’re an old timer like me you will remember that there were no permits issued that far south for the past three years and it’s a big deal to have beavers recovering in that area.

(No that CDFG weighs that at all in their decision to grant a permit), but still, it’s pretty cool. There was a campaign to bring beavers back to LA a few years back.

Turns out all they had to do was wait.

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