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

Category: Beavers


Wow this was quite an impressive headline from our favorite beaver state. The very idea that Fish and Wildlife took an actual poll of attitudes to find out how their actions are being viewed by the public is pretty startling. When is California doing this? I’d like to know.

Poll Shows Gulf Between Washington Voters and State Fish and Wildlife Management

SEATTLE, WA, UNITED STATES, November 1, 2022 /EINPresswire.com/ — A new poll commissioned by Washington Wildlife First reveals that Washington voters do not support many of the policies of the state Department of Fish and Wildlife, and that they overwhelmingly favor a more inclusive Department that represents all the people of the state.

We found that the Washington public opposes many of the Departments policies, particularly its management of large carnivores, says Samantha Bruegger, executive director of Washington Wildlife First, the organization that commissioned the poll. This poll demonstrates how out of touch the Department has become with the interests and values of Washingtonians.

For example, the poll found that 80% of Washington voters oppose spring bear hunting, while only 8% support it. The result was similar in households with active hunters, with 69% of those respondents opposing the spring bear hunt. It was also consistent in most areas of the state, with 81% opposing spring bear hunting in King County compared to 77% in eastern Washington.

You know my next question of course. As public reporting on beavers is changing how are are feelings about depredation changing as well? Maybe California isn’t so happy with problems that never get solved. I had to go looking for the real poll. Fortunately it’s all online.

Public Policy Polling®3020 Highwoods Blvd.Raleigh, NC 27604

713 voters, more than half reached by text. That’s not very onerous. There are early 8 million folks polling 3500 people wouldn’t be impossible. They do it all the time for candidates and voting measures. Why not for beavers?

I don’t know about you but if I were Jay Ensley looking to attract people to my state this would be a billboard at the state lines, My neice lives in Washington. Maybe I should migrate?

I’m very pragmatic in my day dreams. I know people answer what they want to sound like rather than how they would really feel if a beaver was flooding their basement but honestly, I just want to velcro Chuck Bonham to a comfortable chair and make him read that over and over. Would that be okay?

Do you know what a push-poll is? It’s a poll where the cards are already stacked. It’s seeming to ask you a question while in reality it’s really telling you something that will influence your answer. It’s like when you are baby sitting and ask your little sister whether she wants to go out for icky old pizza in a cold noisy market or would rather stay home by the fire and make a pillow fort while your wonderful boyfriend comes over and makes his special spaghetti.

The way you ask the question determines the answer. Let’s just say I like that question.

I’m thinking we should find the 26% of people who voted for Trump and think that beavers are good for the environment AND the 15% who voted for Biden and think beavers are nuisances and we should have a little beer and pizza night presentation. They seem like our target persuadable audience.

You in? Let’s give the last words back to Sandra:

I hope the Governor takes note of how much Washingtonians care about these issues, even though institutional barriers have made it difficult for people who do not hunt or fish to have a voice, Davis says. As the state faces the dual crises of climate change and global biodiversity loss, it is time to abandon the model of a game department that exists to serve hunters and realize that we all have a stake in the health of our fish and wildlife populations, and we all should have a voice.


Funny thing happened on the way to the forum. There were so many fixes and workarounds on the website in the fast few days a number or the links on the main menu bar no longer work. Or rather they WOULD work if the address was tweaked just a little. That means a whole lot of tweaking has to be undertaken. Or someone has to move a big lever at the helm but I can’t be the one to do it and I’ve grown scared to ask because god knows what else would break after that. I guess I will just march in and do 10 a day or something for the rest of time or until I die whichever comes first.

Anyway it’s kinda scary. So happy halloween!


Now that was fun. Turn up the volume.


OMG I’m fixed I’m fixed! Said no cat ever! But dam it’s good to be back. This was an interesting post this morning from a blog in New Mexico that caught my attention, Someone exclaiming that they just got their first beaver photo because “beavers are so hard to photograph”.

Um…

Beavers are hard to photograph in the exact same way as it’s hard to see your mail delivered every day. It just seems to show up in your mailbox when you get home from work mysteriously! But if you learn your mailman’s routine, and wait with a camera when they are likely to show up, you will almost always get a photo. Mystery solved.

There are many, many animals in the Bosque. Most people, even those who spend a lot of time there do not see a fraction of what is possible. Despite years of looking, this is the first picture I have gotten of a Beaver. The far more visible muskrat is smaller and has a thin tail. While beavers are famous as engineers and keystones in their ecosystem, they can often do things wrong. This youngster is trying to build a lodge, but has chosen a section of the ditch that is being dredged right now.

Well he’s right about the muskrat tail. And he’s right about this being a youngster. But that’s as far as it goes. Beavers rarely do things ‘wrong’. Do you mean wrong for humans? Or for what a human being wants any particular moment? I’m assuming that beaver isn’t building a ‘lodge’ but rather a dam that is what prompted the dredging you speak of.

Hmm those look like lodges in the drained stream.  Those lodges are horrible and I can’t even imagine that they withstand such a draining. That looks like a major crisis – 5 alarm fire for beavers. No water in sight. Maybe that’s why you finally saw one. Things are critical.  The story is that the stream gets too full of cattails so they have to dredge them of all the silt they collect or it will use up all the water and muck up the streams.

Um. Okay. That seems kind of crazy to me. And it’s very bad for beavers, whom NM needs like life support. But what do I know. He  is wrong about photographing beavers though. I’m sure about that.

Yearling grooming 2010 Famous photo by Cheryl Reynolds
Yearling with branch Photo Cheryl Reynolds
yearling on dam Photo Cheryl Reynolds
Dad and kit Photo Heidi Perryman

You can have one or the other. But not both.

The universe is playing a little trick on me at the moment. I waded for hours in tech-swamp trying to get my sidebar restored and I got it back but lost the actual writing part. See below,


Oh and all our photographs and images. So it’s about priorities. And I am still working.

OMG I THINK IT’S FIXED!

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