Did you ever have one of those days at the beach or the lake where it wasn’t too cold and wasn’t too hot and you were there with just the right people and just the right beverage and the sun was warm and sleepy and you laid in the sand and just BASKED.
There’s been soo much good news lately I feel like I’ve been Basking in Beavers.
Take this beautiful report from Blaine Callahan in Connecticut is a reminder of all the good things that can happen when people live with beavers.
Last week I traveled to New Hampshire to walk the forest lands my grandparents purchased in the early 1930s. In the woods are beaver ponds, each in a different stage of use or abandonment. March is a perfect time to get a close look at each of them when the still-frozen ground and ice makes for easier walking on wetlands.(more…)
Now I’ve been alive a long, long time. And I’ve been waiting for the state agencies to pick up the beaver gauntlet like a puppy with her tongue hanging out watching the Purina box shake. But I honestly never thought I’d see this. Wade Crowfoot, Secretary of Natural Resources talking about beaver as if the were — well — a natural resource.
My favorite part is when he says the GOVERNOR has asked him this several times.
“A Great question and one that Gavin Newsom asjed me about and continues to ask me about”
Color me all kinds of happy. Now I’m very demanding. Immediately after throwing a party that he said this at all I became very dissatisfied that he doesn’t say more. That the first thing he thinks of doing with them is throwing them out of airplanes. That he relies on these mealy mouth tropes that beavers don’t belong everywhere.
Of course they don’t. They should only be where people need to drink water.
But it all makes great timing for this article to emerge. I heard this week that the Marin Municipal Water District was voting on this issue in their last meeting, and by the looks of things the measure passed,
A coalition of biologists, ranchers, public agencies and environmental groups is exploring the idea of reintroducing beavers to lower Lagunitas Creek as a way to improve habitat for endangered salmon and provide benefits to nearby landowners.
While the idea of reintroducing beavers to Marin is by no means new or close to being implemented, it recently has gained a broader range of supporters who are now endeavoring to bring state wildlife officials on board.
Two ranches near Point Reyes Station that include sections of the creek have given their support for allowing beavers on the land. The Marin Municipal Water District, which is responsible for monitoring Lagunitas Creek and its endangered fish runs, is preparing a letter to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to begin more seriously evaluating the idea.
“At this point, more people are involved in the discussion than used to be involved,” said Eric Ettlinger, an aquatic ecologist with the district. “I think more people are going to be brought into the discussion including the public. We are closer, but there is still a long way to go to work out all of the details of reintroducing beavers.”
I’d definitely involve the public, because they’re the ones that are going to be dealing with these beavers on the front lines. I’m really interested in how this issue plays out, because Marin County is chock full of money and influence. At the California table, they usually get what they want.
While beavers do reside in nearby counties, there has never been a beaver relocation project in the Bay Area, according to the state.
“I am not aware of any beaver relocations in the state since the 1950s,” said Greg Martinelli, lands program manager with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.
But many questions and issues would need to be resolved before the semi-aquatic mammals would arrive in Lagunitas Creek. The state would want to know whether there is suitable habitat, what residents think of the idea, whether there is a risk to human health or safety, whether there is an urgency to take action, how disease transmission would be prevented and what the intended benefits would be.
One of the main drivers in the push to bring beavers to Marin is the benefit their dams could provide to endangered salmon runs and other wildlife on Lagunitas Creek.
The creek has the largest population of Central Coast coho salmon from Monterey Bay to the Sonoma-Mendocino County line. The salmon population, once believed to have been in the thousands, dwindled to the low hundreds as the creek was dammed and other land-use changes occurred.
Well well well. You know Jerry Brown’s water guy lives in Marin and has been ringing this bell for some time. Things are finally shifting a little. Good, I’m sure Marin has all the skills to make this happen, if it can happen.
One of the main strategies biologists are using to restore salmon populations throughout the state is working to recreate their historic habitat, mainly by anchoring large wooden logs in the creek and restoring lost floodplains. The logs were often removed from the creek without an understanding of their benefits to the salmon, including habitat, food and refuge from predators.
The Marin Resource Conservation District has been working with landowners to make these habitat improvements, which often come at the cost of millions of dollars. Nancy Scolari, the district’s executive director, said the same benefits can be achieved through beaver dams.
“They essentially do all the work that we do to help with the environment, but they don’t have to do any of the paperwork,” Scolari said.
Additionally, some ranchers in different parts of the state have found that floodplains created by beavers helped irrigate their pastures longer, providing more forage and better livestock distribution, Scolari said.
Other benefits include groundwater recharge and removing silt from streams, Martinelli said.
Here that clock ticking? It’s time. It’s Time. It’s TIME.
At the same time, Scolari said, there are potential drawbacks that continue to concern ranchers and property owners. For one, beavers introduced to one area could end up establishing themselves in other parts of the county. Other issues include disease transmission, bank destabilization, flooding, agricultural damage, depredation and property damage.
“There are still many questions,” Ettlinger said. “These are still early days. I think we’re far from requesting that beavers be relocated.”
The Black Mountain Ranch and the Gallagher Ranch, which both have sections of Lagunitas Creek running through the properties, have expressed support for reintroducing beavers on their land. Black Mountain Ranch owner Marcel Houtzager said he has worked on other habitat restoration projects and learned about the potential benefits of beavers.
While he said his cattle likely wouldn’t benefit from the project — the nearly 2 miles of the creek running through the property mostly go through wooded terrain — the bees, birds and other animals likely would.
“I have zero commercial incentive to be excited about this,” Houtzager said. “The habitat around the creek is important.”
The Sierra club is happy. It has a large corporation to blame, a native hero to champion, and a water story to unfold. Even if it does mention those tiresome beavers.
A group of Mountain Maidu has reclaimed its former lands, but not the
In the spring of 2021, a crew of nine workers arrived at Tásmam Koyóm, at the headwaters of Northern California’s Feather River. They began to cut down saplings, dragging them over a fast-moving creek that ran through a meadow, then bending them into a tangled weave of trunks and branches that held strong in the current.
The landscape around them was an artifact of decades of cattle grazing—the utility that once owned this land, Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), had leased it to ranchers. The cattle had compacted the soil and dried out the meadow’s outer reaches, transforming what had been a wetland into a field of dry grass. As the work progressed, and the sapling dams blocked the current, areas of the parched meadow began to fill with slow-moving channels of water.
The crew—made up of Mountain Maidu youths and employees of a local habitatrestoration outfit called Swift Water Design—called themselves “beavers.” Actual beavers haven’t been seen in this region for years, and it is forbidden by state law to introduce them. Some researchers claim that beavers have never been here at all, although there are dozens of words for the species and its handiwork in languages native to this region. The beaver dam analogs would, hopefully, create an inviting habitat for any beavers who happened to make it this far upstream, encouraging them to keep the dams up and running in perpetuity.(more…)
One of the facts that often surprises folks about beavers is their size. After years of seeing juvenile beaver skulls or photos because that’s the easiest kind to catch they are sure grown beavers are about 20 lbs. Martinez could help them learn otherwise. Thank goodness Cornell was able to help.
BALDWINSVILLE — Back in February, Kindred Kingdoms Wildlife Rehabilitation Center directors Jean and Len Soprano rescued a small beaver off Gaskin Road in Whispering Woods. After more than a month of rehab, the Sopranos released the beaver into the Seneca River on March 19. They carried him in a medium animal carrier, put him in a small cart with wheels and pulled him down a muddy wet path about 1/4 mile to the river.
When they rescued him, Jean Soprano said he was 14 pounds and they thought he was about 2 years old. They wanted to make sure the beaver was not sick so they took him to the Cornell Wildlife vet program for an exam. Based on the body scans they did, they determined the skeleton of the beaver was that of a 1-year-old instead of what they originally thought. Since the mother will care for her babies for two years, this beaver will find his way back to his mother at the beaver den.(more…)
What I really want to read about is some smart community that has decided to deal with beavers in a pro-active way, rather than in a predictably trappy way. Don’t you want to hear a story like that?
The town is grappling with a beaver damaging several trees near its youth centre but said it will focus on mitigation rather than relocating the creature.
A beaver has been set up at the Holland River for several weeks, bringing trees down in its dam-building efforts. But the animal has kept busy, and has now taken down five trees, some planted by the town. It has also started working on the other side of the river by the town seniors’ centre.
But regardless, the town approach will not be to directly intervene. The public works department said it is aware of the beaver but will try alternative methods instead.(more…)