Maybe, like me, you missed the beaver coexistence webinar on Friday due to seen and unforeseen circumstances.. Well you’re in luck because the whole thing was recorded and available for you to watch at your convenience.
Enjoy!

I am feeling like such a beaver old-timer this photo makes me happy. It was taken in early 2013 of Sherri Tippie and the crew working on Jari Osbourne’s Leave it to Beaver for PBS Nature years ago. You know the one way before Ben’s book that Emily Fairfax said inspired her to switch majors back in the day. It reminds me that all champions live in a new world if their lucky. Thanks Sherri.

It’s all my fault. I was so selfishly focused on getting out of the hospital and not going back what I neglected my ONE job. Writing about the heroines of urban beavers. Rachel Siegel was kind enough to reprint this for me and you can bet Pam Adams and I are chatting soon.
pamHow cool is THAT????

The famous SF French-American Artist who has allowed herself to be inspired by beavers.
Suzanne Husky is a committed artist whose watercolors goes beyond simple aesthetics to become a powerful tool for ecological and historical awareness.
Through works of great finesse and beauty, she captures the details of rivers, wetlands and natural habitats, while telling their stories of destruction and resilience.
Her art illustrates with poetry and precision the crucial role of the beaver in the restoration of aquatic ecosystems, mixing art, science and environmental advocacy.
Her paintings invite contemplation but also reflection, revealing the impacts of human activity and the hope that nature can be reborn thanks to keystone species.
Her work embodies the very essence of Eco-synthesis, where each work is both a testimony and an invitation to rethink our connection to the living.
Suzanne Husky stands out from a certain form of contemporary art that could be described as gratuitous provocation or derision towards the viewer – this “art” that sometimes seems to be reduced to symbolic gestures devoid of depth, like taping a banana to a wall.
Her work is part of a tradition where art seeks to awaken the senses, emotions and intellect. Through her watercolors, she restores the artistic gesture to its primary vocation: to capture and transmit a truth, to touch the soul and to inspire awareness. She reminds us that art can and must be meaningful, far from any superficiality or mockery.
Her work is a sincere dialogue between the artist, nature and the viewer, where each line and each color tells a profound and universal story.
Suzanne Husky is a founding figure of this new movement in painting, artelligence, which synthesizes complex historical, scientific or social realities into a transcendent artistic expression.
https://www.suzannehusky.com/
Thanks Robin for the find!
There aren’t many times in the world a famous beaver article is followed up by another beaver article that says EXACTLY what I want people to know about the first one. Consider this my last birthday present for turning 60. Not bad for a girl who just got out of the hospital.
California is a poster child for the impacts of climate change — a state beset by shifting weather patterns that bring inconsistent snowfalls and years-long droughts. Many of its forests teeter on the edge of destruction, wherein a single spark could ignite yet another record-breaking fire. And the state must simultaneously muster — and store — enough water from often-scant annual precipitation for both the U.S.’s largest population and a yawning expanse of hydrologically intensive agriculture.
“I think we’re in kind of an idyllic [stage of] beaver literacy,” advocate Heidi Perryman said. “People have begun to hear a lot of good things about beavers, and they’re very hopeful that beavers can fix everything that we’ve messed up.”
But the view of this animal as wholly positive is “no more accurate” than earlier beliefs that they’re always a nuisance, Perryman added.
Perryman, a child psychologist in the San Francisco Bay Area town of Martinez, calls herself an “accidental beaver advocate.” When a pair of beavers turned up in Martinez’s Alhambra Creek in 2006, town leaders wanted to get rid of them for fear that their dams would cause flooding.
But Perryman was taken with Martinez’s new rodent residents, and she wasn’t alone. A groundswell against killing them surged, and the beavers stayed.
Perryman reckons that, for years, she spent five hours a week watching the beavers after their arrival in Martinez, learning about their behaviors, discovering their personalities, and eventually documenting more than two dozen individuals. She posted blogs, photos and video on a website linked to the nonprofit she still leads, Worth a Dam.
As the beavers changed the watershed with their engineering, other wildlife flourished, Perryman said. “We had mergansers and heron and otter and mink, things that we had never seen in our creek before because of the dams that beavers maintained.”
The town is seen as a model for coexistence, and it still hosts an annual beaver festival even though the beavers have moved on, no longer living in Martinez.
Now, with two pilot relocations –– the one to Tásmam Koyóm and another on the Tule River Reservation in Sierra Nevada foothills that began in 2024 –– there’s another tool that sidesteps the lethal removal of beavers that come in conflict with humans.
Though exact numbers are hard to come by, Perryman estimates that the state allows killing of 1,000 to 3,000 beavers each year through the “depredation permits” CDFW issues to landowners when beavers cause damage, according to her public records requests.
“It’s still remarkable how many times California turns down the opportunity to coexist with beavers,” Perryman said.
All the feels. Thank you so much John Cannon for listening and taking what I said seriously. Not bad for a girl who just got out of the hospital.
Perryman said she understands why moving beavers is so enticing.
“It really appeals to people because it’s so much nicer to relocate things than to kill them,” Perryman told Mongabay. But, she added, “It’s really important for people to do relocations thoughtfully and carefully … It’s not without risks.”
Rather than concentrate on those risks, Perryman said, the focus today is more often on how beavers can help, which can be rife with unrealistic expectations. That view has made her skeptical of California’s translocation efforts.
“You don’t get to relocate beavers and have them stay just where you want them or have them only build dams where you want them or have them only take the trees you choose for them,” Perryman said. “They do their own thing, and our fortune is that we can be smart enough to learn how to coexist with them and [benefit from them].”
Most experts agree that finding ways to live with beavers should be the primary aim, before trying to move them.
“Translocation is kind of the final piece,” the OAEC’s Dolman said, “if and when you’ve exhausted everything [else].”
R. Kyle Pagel, a scientist with the state’s beaver restoration program, echoes that sentiment. CDFW starts with encouraging coexistence strategies when there’s conflict, such as coating tree trunks with sand-containing paint to discourage beavers from cutting down trees.
Only after those efforts fail should relocating the beavers — or killing them — be considered. The answer is, in part, pragmatic: The thinking is that once they’re gone, the “problem” is solved, but a spot that’s suitable for one family of beavers is apt to attract another, Pagel said.
It is better to fix the problem than to kill the problem. And better to solve the problem than move the problem.
Researchers like Emily Fairfax say they want to return more beavers to their historical range. The animals once lived across much of the state, but rampant trapping for fur markets up through the beginning of the 20th century “ruined beaver populations,” Fairfax said.
“I think we owe it to the beavers to do whatever we can to help them reestablish in the watersheds.”
I’m really not so sure how I feel about this sentence. On the one hand we do owe beavers a LOT. But on the other hand beavers are already reestablishing themselves in the watersheds. And we can’t seem to stop killing them when they do.
I’m not sure how much more of our “help” beavers can take?
Given a chance, Fairfax said, beavers can adapt, if not always in predictable ways. She was a physicist before diving into the watery world of beaver ecology, and she said pinning their behaviors down is next to impossible, from the materials they use for their lodge to their choices of food. “They break every single rule,” she said. “You can’t write a law to describe them.”
A big part of the problem is shifting our approach from controlling nature to partnering with it, she added. “We dammed the Mississippi. We’ve built levees. We’ve dammed the Colorado. We know how to control nature,” Fairfax said. But teaming up with nature is “a lot harder.”
“Working with beavers requires letting go of some control,” Fairfax added. “It will be messy and frustrating.”
Well I agree with that 100 percent. Beavers do their own thing. They don’t build where we want them to or what we want them to. They aren’t lego sets that we just need to install everywhere.
And for the record, beavers DO adapt. But they can’t adapt to everything we have thrown at them for a five hundred years. Sometimes we are going to have to give them a little help first.

Just so you know, of all the photos in the article of ungroomed beavers in cages or being released onto tribal land THIS one is the best. And it was taken 8 blocks from my house in the community that worked to save them.