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

Category: Beavers or Social Ambasadors


When’s the last time you thanked the volunteers at the hundreds of wildlife rescue sites around the world who are crazy busy this time of year feeding baby everythings? My parents used to to to church with a woman who did the vetrinary care for Tri County wildlife, and she would often come to mass with a baby raccoon or jackrabbit that needed to be fed so often it couldn’t be left alone. Our own Cheryl Reynolds is now a volunteer at the International Bird Rescue and Research Center, and just put pictures of some baby owls she rescued on her web page.

And then there’s this:

Everyone is wild for the two newest additions: 2 baby beavers. The one in the movie above is getting fed on his back wrapped in a towel, by bottle just like our own kids. Below is the sibling of the one getting fed, hanging out in a tank with a stuffed Beaver Mommy. See his little flat tail?…Just yesterday I was at the Wildlife Rehab Center and had a first with The Beavers. I’ve never even seen one until 2 weeks ago, and in that time I filmed THIS little movie of them drinking from a bottle (You MUST click that link to watch, if you haven’t seen it!). To my great delight, a few days later I myself was feeding them. And yesterday I got to “swim” them…. meaning we fill up the large utility sink off the kitchen and put them in so they can get used to swimming. Had I been thinking, I would have gotten THAT on video.

Adventures in Nature

Her parting words in the entry? “Who knew Beavers were this cute and… human?

Ahhhh, we did of course.

On a different note, our beaver friend Ian Timothy needs your finger clicking help, and would very much appreciate it if you could visit his claymation entry into the “Morph” contest, and vote for him by rating his video. He’s currently in second place, and the winner gets a treat from the original artist who created Morph. We want to encourage this 14 year old wonder to go on and do amazing films that help beavers everywhere, so give him two minutes and go here.

And finally, guess who’s “going to Medford” tomorrow to fix that pesky beaver problem?


The Medford Transcript

Just two weeks after 100 people crowded into City Hall to find a solution to flooding and blocked access to a fire road caused by a beaver living at Whittemore Brook, city and state officials were expected to visit the site of the problematic dam behind Winford Way.

Seems some pesky beavers have found some pesky advocates and are demanding realistic solutions for solvable problems. Lucky for them they picked Massachusetts as their watery residence, because Mike Callahan of Beaver Solutions is just a two hour drive away.

(We had to fly ours in 3000 miles!)

Read the cast of characters that inspected this problem, and fondly recall the major hoopla that we went through two Novembers ago.  At least they have actually mention the word “Wildlife” in their equivalent of Fish and Game.

I was ready to watch a little must-see TV so went searching for video of their meeting two weeks ago. Unfortunately Medford doesn’t video tape and their minutes aren’t yet posted. Still its a familiar story.

I loved this part especially:

Ryan said the beaver issue has taken on a life of its own and residents far and wide are coming forward to volunteer their service.“People want to not only save the beaver, but also help the neighbors,” Ryan said. “The idea is to move quickly with professional help.”

Beavers change things. It’s what they do. Remember?

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=X7-i6MiGvbw]

PS That first image in the video isn’t a beaver, you all caught that, right?


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Is it the TRUTH?

Is it FAIR to all concerned?

Does it promote GOOD WILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIP?

Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?

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I hadn’t known about this 4-truth philosophy of the Rotary Club until they repeated them at the meeting I spoke at this morning. There had been a scheduling mix-up and I got a last minute phone call to ask if I would pinch-hit by talking about beavers. Remembering the not uncontroversial reception beavers got at the Kiwanis club I approached with cautious optimism and figured it was probably best for attendance if beavers weren’t on the “official schedule.”

Like the Kiwanis club, the meeting was a “who’s who” of Martinez, with a member of the school board, our past and present superintendents, city manager and council member Janet Kennedy all in attendance. I was aware I’d be preaching the beaver gospel to mostly non-believers, and the response was generally positive, although there were flooding, mosquito and burrowing questions all in attendance.

I thought I was pretty much home free when I was surprised during the question period by councilwoman Kennedy expressing her disappointment that my “Happy Anniversary” letter in the Gazette this weekend hadn’t thanked the council and city staff for their hard work on this issue. Either my sarcasm was too veiled, or hers was, and she wished I had been more appreciative of all the city’s hard work. I was a little startled by the public reprimand, but more by the almost determined misunderstanding with which it was offered.

I suggested she write her own letter in response so she could give credit where she thought it was due. What I should have answered, in retrospect, was obviously that Janet was right. We hadn’t thanked the city enough, and Janet in particular.

This is a woman who has said publicly on more than one occasion that if she had been at the November 7th city council meeting she would have voted to get rid of the beavers and end the issue once and for all. So, from the bottom of my heart, thank you, Janet, for going to China.

Appropriate thanks will no doubt take time to carefully offer for each member’s role in this, so I will work on that gratitude over time, but for now lets learn from the Rotary club and apply the 4-way test to the city’s concerns about the beavers so far.

Is it the truth?

No. The original hydrology report by Phillip Williams and Associates discussed a 7 foot dam as if it were a concrete weir, meaning a fixed permanent threat. The dam was never seven feet and was always made of mud and sticks. Any time we have a rainfall of more than a half inch in 24 hours there is a washout. An accurate report would have reflected the effect of high flow on the dam itself.

Is it fair to all concerned?

No. It was not fair to invest nearly half a million in sheetpile installation for the benefit of one property owner when there are so many properties upstream that have eroding creekbanks that need help too. Moreover, any hydrologist could have named a half dozen places on Alhambra Creek where that money could have been better spent to benefit the broader good.

Does it Promote good will and better friendship?

Sort of. The city’s attempt to exterminate and/or relocate the beavers did not make friends, but keeping the beavers has.  You might thank the beaver supporters for that.  Still, if the council woman were my guest I don’t think I would ever hijack her speech to  publicly ask why she hasn’t thanked us for the “second hand” overflow of our good will. It’s true I don’t know very much about service clubs in general, so maybe that’s typical of how they work.

Will it be beneficial to all concerned?

That’s a hard one, and I’m honestly not sure it ever gets met without some telescoping perspective and “big picture” or “in the long run” reasoning. It is mostly better for Martinez if the beavers stay and do their mascot-ambassador-environmental engineer work. It is better for the heron and the fish and the mink and the otter, but it probably isn’t better for the councilwoman’s blood pressure or my popularity with the council in general. There are a few trees that would not describe it as beneficial, and the other beavers waiting to move in are probably not happy about it either.

A very interesting ethical test, thank you Rotary for hosting me. All in all, a day full of lessons and morning well spent.


I’m still trying to recover from Saturday’s earthday extravaganza. I haven’t really had time to sift through the experiences and see what polishes up bright enough to post. I know my conversation with the enchanting girl who told me with quickened breath how they had actually seen an otter once while camping stands out big. Child encounters with wildlife are powerful and create a huge relationship to the natural world. Remember this photo?

The close encounter with wildlife opens something inside you, like a door to a world where we all used to be free to wander. It’s a door that all of us have, but I think it gets cluttered with hardships and conveniences without regular use. Getting it working right in childhood is the surest way to keep it working up through adulthood, and I see it as a primary benefit of the Beavers in Martinez. Worth a Dam was asked this week to do a presentation for the two sessions of John Muir Mountain Day Camp over the summer. How could we refuse?

On a related note, I got a panicked call last night to do a presentation wednesday morning at the Rotary club for an emergency replacement of their regular schedule. It’s “take your office administrator to the club day” and our own city manager is a member. I’m not as hopeful about opening those low rusty doors, but of course I said yes. Wouldn’t you?


Frogard Butler works with one of our young artists on a clay figure for the beaver habitat.

Photo: Cheryl Reynolds.

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