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

Category: Beavers


                                       What would he do,
Had he the motive and the cue for passion
That I have? He would drown the stage with tears…

This was a touching article to come across on a rainy morning. The couple who found the dead beaver are so upset and worried he was poisoned. I sympathize but can’t help but wonder what they would have done in Martinez where all our kits and our yearling were found dead within a matter of days.

Beloved beaver that took up residence in Cambridge park found dead

A beaver that has been making its home in Churchill Park this winter, and was beloved by regular park goers, was found dead by a couple who was trying to catch a glimpse of the country’s national animal over the weekend. 

Caroline Young and her husband were on a mission to see the Churchill Park beaver in its natural habitat after reading a previous CambridgeToday story.

On Jan. 8, the couple got packed up and hit the trails in an attempt to see one of Canada’s most revered animals in action. 

When they got to the pond, they first saw the massive willow tree the beaver had nearly chewed through, then they made a horrible discovery; the beaver was lying dead in the stream. 

“We walked around for about 15 minutes and couldn’t find him,” said Young. “We were just about to leave and we saw what we thought was a muskrat laying under some sticks.”

After turning over some of the foliage covering the animal, it was revealed to be the beaver. Having not seen any obvious signs of injury, they were questioning how it could have died. 

“There were no bite marks in it or any signs of damage,” said Young. “We’re just hoping some crazy person didn’t get it into their mind that these animals were destroying anything and poisoned it.”

Well I understand the instinct. But it’s given all  the time we spend obviously planning to kill beavers its unlikely that folks would bother with a stealth attack.

“It was just so sad to see it laying there,” she said. “When I discovered it my heart just sank.”

The City of Cambridge has confirmed to CambridgeToday that their team did go to the creek at Churchill Park on Monday and a deceased beaver was recovered.

“We have called animal services to remove the beaver,” said Micheal Hausser, director of infrastructure for the city. “From our observations, there is no obvious cause for the beaver’s death.”

The city had implemented measures to prevent the beaver from continuing to cut down the trees by wrapping the trunks of the larger trees in a wire mesh. Hausser said the animal did not pass away due to any act by the city or city staff. 

When Young was recalling the situation she did notice that there were some carrots scattered on the banks of the creek, making her think the animal could have died of something other than natural causes.

“It almost looked like someone was trying to get them to eat the carrots, but I can’t be sure if that is what killed them,” she added. 

Young feels for the people who have made it a habit to come and watch the beaver and the progress they make. She is hoping that if there was foul play involved that those who committed the act will be brought to justice. 

Beaver do eat carrots. And it’s winter. Someone could also have wanted him to have an easier food source. If the beaver was really alone he was hanging on by a thread anyway. A lone beaver is a precarious beaver.

I’m glad you cared for him and felt something when he died. But honestly. Beavers die. Out of 29 in 10 years we had yearlings die from round worm parasite. We had a beaver that was blind. Over the years our first mother beaver broke a tooth and starved to death. It’s a terrible suspenseful thing watching over wild animals.

It’s a precious gift with many sharp edges.

Now because great sadness requires great cheer I am sharing this from our friend Kathy Rothman in Florida. Otters are obviously very cute. Everyone thinks so. Well, maybe not everyone.

 

 


There’s a wonderful news story about our friend that I wanted to share this morning, but once again it will have to wait for me to comment on the massive castor-catastropshizing that’s going on EVERYWHERE under our noses. Literally people I haven’t spoke  to in a decade are writing me in a panic asking whether this could possibly be true.

Imagine the worst headline you could possibly write, have a contest with all your friends and then sit down with the writers of White Lotus and a thesaurus to make it significantly worse, then double it, and you might come close.

Photos from space show 11,000 beavers are wreaking havoc on the Alaskan tundra as savagely as wildfire

Just stop. All by itself that’s enough for now. Beavers wreaking havoc AS SAVAGELY AS WILDFIRE. Could anything be more terrifying to a country that has grown terrified of fires? I can barely force myself to go on. But I must.

Beavers are taking over the Alaskan tundra, completely transforming its waterways, and accelerating climate change in the Arctic.

The changes are so sudden and drastic that they’re clearly visible from space.

As the Arctic tundra warms, woody plants are growing along its rivers and streams, creating perfect habitats for beavers.

As the furry rodents move into these waterways, they make themselves at home by doing what they do best: chewing and carrying wood to build dams, and clogging rapid rivers and streams to make lush ponds.


Those dam lush beavers with their lush beaver pond ways. They just swim in like they own the place and without so much as a “by-your-leave” start making things better for all these other species we didn’t invite.

Yes that’s EXACTLY like wildfire.

Tape and his colleagues assessed aerial photos from the early 1950s and found no signs of beaver presence in Alaska’s Arctic tundra. The first signs of beavers appeared in 1980 imagery. In satellite imagery from the 2000s and 2010s, the beaver ponds doubled.

Can I just pause and point out that after the devastation of the fur trade started to wear off EVERYONE noticed an increase in the beaver population. And it took from about 1840-1970 for beavers to start showing up in the rest of the world. Too bad you don;t have any aerial photos back from 1600. Oh right, there were no satellites or cameras or air travel them. Never mind. I’m sure you’re right and it looked the same as in the 1950’s..

“All of western Alaska is now really densely populated with beaver ponds,” Tape said.

That’s consistent with what Indigenous people in the area have observed. It’s especially obvious on the ground in towns like Kotzebue, where there were no beavers 20 years ago, and now they’re everywhere, Tape said.

So he was floored when he saw beaver-engineering projects completely transforming landscapes across Alaska.

“It was like hitting the ecosystem over the head with a hammer,” he said.

The severity and speed of beavers’ footprint on the landscape, as seen from space, is more akin to wildfire, Tape said.

HITTING THE ECOSYSTEM OVER THE HEAD WITH A HAMMER!!!!!!!!!  and MORE AKIN TO WILDFIRE!!!!!!!!!

Ken Tape HIMSELF is responsible for that headline. Here I was trying to be charitable and blaming the copy girl. But no. He really made those words with his own mouth.

The US Department of Metaphor just released an alert reading that Ken is at large and was himself a failed candidate in their “comparative retraining” program. As an undergrad he was known to storm through their lecture halls reading essays about how his “Christmas dinner was as tasty as a box of nails” and how his “wife’s face was more beautiful than a lethal spider in the grass.”

I suppose a beaver’s effect on the ecosystem is kind of like being hit with a hammer. A magical hammer that makes everything you broke yesterday form suddenly back together as if it never happened.

Like I wish I could use on this article for instance.

“If you like the Arctic the way it was, the old Arctic, then beavers are bad for that. Whereas if you kind of embrace the new Arctic, well, then beavers are one of your champions,” Tape said.

If you like the arctic the way it was TOO BAD BECAUSE WE HAVE BEEN RELEASING CARBON FOR 100 YEARS and didn’t do anything to stop or slow down even when we could have and now its screwed so there. Gosh I wish there was something that could help make it more livable.

As temperatures rise, the permafrost thaws and releases the greenhouse gases carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere.

That’s the one beaver impact that Tape’s team is sure of: Beaver ponds are thawing the surrounding permafrost, exacerbating the climate crisis. Just how much, is not yet clear.

More and more beavers will likely spread through the tundra in the future, continuing to move north as the Arctic warms.

“All they have to do is swim downstream,” Tape said. “If they find the habitat there — in other words, if it’s warm enough, if the shrubs are tall enough, if there’s enough unfrozen water in winter — then they’re going to forever change that place.”

Ben Goldfarb agrees this is the worst headline he has ever read but says he has talked at length with Ken and knows he is no beaver hater. He thinks maybe he means “Hammer” in a good way. Like nothing ever gets built without them.

Hmm. I’m doubtful the average reader will take it that way. And so I’m going to end by offering a visual comparison to show how despite everything they’ve read to the contrary, the effect of beavers and the effect of a a wildfire are actually quite different.

It’s really pretty subtle. Let me know if can spot it.


This is the way the year ends
this is the way the year ends
this is the way the year ends
not with a bang but a whimper

The very end of 2022 is one of those maddening days where I have both excellent news and horrible news to report. Should I chose between or give them both? I think I’ll save the stupid faux-indiginious news about beavers destroying wildlife in the tundra with their evil dams where the young live and are ruining water quality for another day. Oh yes. It’s THAT stupid, But it’s depressingly stupid. Lets just do the good news because it’s new years eve.

There’s plenty to be happy about with this fine new movie from Carol Evans in Nevada. I like everything about this film and I know every one you share it with will like it too. It’s wonderful to see the magical things Carol’s hardwork and spirit is accomplishing even after all her decades of hard work at the BLM.


Serendipity is a word that describes how new things cross your path and then turn out to be related to totally different things that you had no idea about. Yesterday I got the annual letter from the Beaver Institute about their year end achievements and it had a new beaver lodge photo that I’ve not seen before. I thought, hmm that’s interesting.

And this morning I saw an article from the Saxton Library in Pennsylvania that they were doing a reading of the new book “The Lodge that Beaver Built” So of course I rushed right out to investigate and saw that the new mystery lodge image is from that book.
Hmm I admit I was intrigued, especially when I found out that it was released in late fall and escaped my notice! Would it be full of beautiful images or misleading facts? Was it about the lodge because the author mistakenly thought that beavers live IN the dam? Was it full of images of nutria? No. it’s perfect. Except for the title which I feel really should be the POND that beaver built. But that’s just me.

Enjoy this reading from UCSLD in Oregon.

So of course I went searching for the author Randi Sonenshine and found out that she is represented by  literary agent in ORINDA. Umm. That’s awfully close to home. I’m thinking she’d love to know about the beaver festival and donate a copy or two, aren’t you?


I also noticed that she refers readers to the Beaver Institute and Beavers Wetlands and Wildlife at the end but doesn’t mention us or the festival. Because honestly, why mention a children’s program in California? I assume that’s just an unintentional oversight.


Sure Christmas comes with it’s share of good cheer and all, but nothing comes even CLOSE to this story which features the finest human profile I believe we will ever see.
I love this man with a fiery passion. I’m sure you’ll understand why. You might love him too. But step aside, because I saw him first,

Whatever else you do in the final days before 2023, WATCH THIS VIDEO!

Beavers to the rescue! Rodents aid Bragg Creek man’s landscaping project

In a near perfect marriage of headaches, Bolduc’s neighbour had an uninvited colony of beavers that he considered a nuisance and Bolduc welcomed the rodents to his side of the property line with open arms.

The beavers soon constructed a lodge that not only ensured the well never ran dry, but created a large pond in Bolduc’s backyard.

“It increased the water table by six to eight feet, solved my problem with the well, no more upset wife which is fantastic,” Bolduc told CTV News. “At the end, it was a wonderful place for the kids and I to come skating.”

It’s not just the neighbours that enjoy the new pond, so does the wildlife. Moose and bears have been spotted in the water, occasionally at the same time.

Don’t you LOVE this man? Shouldn’t he be emperor and president and King of North America forever? Or at least in charge of all the wetlands and water for the foreseeable future?

There are few things that make me want to drop everything and move to Canada. Pierre Bolduc is one of them.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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