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

Category: Burrowing Owls


Ahhh the familiar snap of shutters, and the honking of horns in support. This I remember from the beaver days. Yesterday’s owling was a good success, with about 40 supporters, great neighborhood interest, and a channel 5 news camera. Lisa Owens Viani brought lovely owl masks, and I came up with the idea of printing the eyes on stickers and putting them on everyone’s backs. There were children who came by who wanted to sign a petition and parents who had walked the neighborhood and always wondered about those little owls.

Two things I didn’t expect: to be greeted by strangers like animal-advocate rockstars for saving the Martinez Beavers, and to see actually little owls popping out of their burrows. They were every bit as adorable as you might have anticipated. I can’t think of anything that is more charismatically worth saving. (Shhh don’t tell the beavers.)

We were on channel 5 and channel 2, and there is a great article in the Contra Costa Times. All in all, it was an afternoon well spent and a great way to launch into 2010.


Canada Valley Road & McFarlan Ranch Drive in Antioch, CA
2pm to 3pm
January 3, 2010 (Sunday)

protest_map

When we teach our children how to care for urban wildlife, they grow up to value and protect wild places all over: but also more able to tame their own ‘wildness’ and live peacefully with others. Come join us, remember the support our beavers had from antioch, and beyond.

 


Scott and the plight of the burrowing owls made the big screen last night, click on the photo in case you missed the tale. If the new year has left you full of renewed good intentions, join us Sunday and show the world where you stand on the whole protecting-property-owner-interest-versus-preserving-rare-wildlife debate. (Given that you’re reading this blog I assume I already know…) I’ve already heard from a few beaver supporters who will be in attendance, and lots of others who “Give a Hoot”. I’m sure your neighbor will carpool with you. Let’s remind the powers that be that wildlife matters.


Remember the owl in Winnie the Pooh? He was the only one in hundred acre wood that could spell his name. W-O-L. Beaver friend Scott Artis has been working hard to save the burrowing owls in Antioch. He was able to generate some modest media attention. Hopefully this is just the beginning.For information about Sunday’s protest, check here.

To evict the owls before nesting season starts in February, environmental consultants Monk & Associates are installing one-way doors on the owls’ burrows that will let them out, but prevent them from returning. Once the owls are out, the biologists will destroy the burrows and fumigate for ground squirrels.”We do it in a systematic manner until all the burrows are collapsed and the owls are moved out,” said Geoff Monk, a certified wildlife biologist who has been working with nesting birds of prey for 30 years.

Thirty years disturbing nesting birds of prey? Do they give a gold watch for that? The article yawns through several justifications for their eviction, without any effort to demonstrate that this will be harmless or reference to research suggesting the owls effortlessly relocate. It allows multiple Monkisms, and one comment by Scott, then clunks to a big Disney ending with the quote,

We wouldn’t want to hurt them in any way, and I am not concerned about evicting them at all,” Monk said. “They will all find happy homes.

Ahhh. Happy Homes! Maybe that could be the name of your new subdivision. Now, we mustn’t blame the staggeringly successful Walnut Creek-based Monk & Associates. They are just doing their job. (“Biostitutes: The other oldest profession,” someone said to me yesterday). We ask for scientists to teach us how to successfully interfere, and fortunately some are willing to do the job. I heard an exciting rumor about their efforts in a previous intervention that I am not permitted to share, but suffice it to say the ensuing feeling that washed over me was not reassurance.

In case you want a comparison to some better reporting, check out the parallel article from just a month ago in the related paper the Mercury News. It starts out with the necessary “Why should I care” hook that every busy reader needs, and a serious challenge to the idea that the owls can just “move on”. There’s also a recognition that people need wild places to survive, and a clear commitment by the city to provide a thoughtful civic response to that need.

Kleinhaus said the concept of mitigation doesn’t work for owls: the city isn’t physically moving those specific owls to a new home. They’re simply assuming that they will find somewhere else to live, and more owls will reproduce in Alameda to make up for them. Burrowing owls tend to show “strong fidelity” to their nest sites, remaining in the same area for years, according to California Department of Fish and Game documents. As they disappear from Santa Clara County, Kleinhaus said, they’re difficult to bring back.

“They’ve been mitigated to death,” she said.

Now I realize that Antioch isn’t Mountain View. There’s a huge difference in median income for a start. Still, how much do you want to bet that the people of both zip codes want thoughtful development that incorporates and respects open spaces so that homes and businesses are enriched by their surroundings? How much would it cost to set aside a little wild space for a family of owls? What would be lost and what would be gained?

Go ahead and think about the answer. I can wait.


Okay. It’s the real Eve. I have cookies to cut and beavers to decorate. I will leave you with this bit of cheer which never ever fails to make me smile. Especially the words “mostly” and “you know what?”

Meanwhile, supporter GP wrote Martin Salter, the anti-beaver MP in england, (as did many of you, thanks!) and got back a copy of his official pro-salmon anti-beaver paperwork, which I sent along to the beaver-salmon research group of Brock Dolman. And Scott of JournOwl has been working hard  to save the remaining owls with a ton of new supporters organized by SFEP Lisa Owen’s Viani. She has put him in touch with Michael Graf, the environmental attorney in El Cerrito that helped us with our sheet pile tragedy, and they may be able to get something slowed down legally. Our own VP Cheryl went and walked the area with Scott yesterday and took this photo of a remaining owl awaiting foreclosure.

Photos: Cheryl Reynolds

 

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