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

Category: City Reports


Yesterday was grant-writing day. Worth A Dam is submitting two to the Contra Costa County Fish and Wildlife Commission, who generously paid for our button project last year. This year one grant is asking for funds for the Ecosystem Engineer teaching project using Wildbryde charms to make the bracelet project called “A.L.L. A.B.O.A.R.D.” (A little learning about beaver operations and riparian dwellers). Each charm will be a wildlife railcar and the beaver will be pulling the train.all aboardThe second grant is for the beaver mural, and I’m calling the project “The bridge to nature” and saying its civic and ecological to pay attention to what the beavers did in our creek. I have no earthly idea if they’d consider a project like this, but I figure I might as well ask. Because of my recent work on the urban beaver chapter I was able to pull some nice language out of my  section and use it in the grant, which I think makes us sound really deserving, but that might be just me. We’ll see.

a bridge to nature
Amongst the crowded demands on urban waterways, expected to handle storms, street runoff and flood prevention, there is often little attention paid to the habitat needs of wildlife drawn to urban creeks. This misses a critical value for both the watershed and the public. Numerous studies have shown the psychological and physical benefits to residents of urban wildlife. These include reduced stress, greater satisfaction and even crime reduction! Some researchers argue that urban wildlife’s significance in urban planning should be regarded with as much weight in composing a healthy community as open space or air quality. In addition to encouraging social cohesion, people consistently report feeling enriched by living with nature, even when they are challenged.

Martinez became an unsuspecting (and not entirely willing) test case for all these benefits with the arrival of the beavers in Alhambra Creek in 2007.

I’m actually very proud of that introduction, wonder if anyone else will like it! There are strict page limits on your submission so I’m using the graphics in the footers as attempted subliminal influence. Jon will drop them off monday afternoon, and then we’ll try to forget about them and not wait anxiously by the phone. Worth A Dam will still fund both projects regardless of their decision but approval would be nice! I found a great quote for the mural one too, which I’ll share.

“While the end products—the works of public art—are always beautiful, their deeper value lies in the conversations we create, the connections we build, and the legacy of relationships we foster along the way, often with transformative results.”

Jane Golden Mural Arts Program, Philadelphia


Meanwhile the terrible decisions in Tom’s River NJ have prompted a full protest, which is something considering the cold weather. I personally can’t see what it can possibly accomplish because I’m sure those beavers are already long gone. This brand of outrage is more likely to teach the administrators to be more sneaky next time, than to encourage actual reform. But who know’s? Once upon a time Martinez got lucky.

Beaver trapping sparks outrage, protests in Toms River

A Toms River neighborhood has become divided over how to handles the town’s beaver population.

The Toms River township administrator tells News 12 New Jersey that the town had to hire a trapper to catch the beavers after neighbors complained about the population around Lake Placid. Neighbors complained that the beavers have chewed up the trees and their dams are causing flooding.

Ahh memories.


Beaver death sparks fear over festive fireworks

After some children killed a beaver with a firecracker near Berlin, animal protectionists called for people celebrate new year without using fireworks.

“Setting off fireworks is not only incredibly bad for the environment, it is also incredibly unsettling for animals,” Hubert Weiger from the Nature Protection Society said on Monday.

While he said he had every sympathy for people wanting to celebrate the New Year”, Weiger advised people “not to waste your money on fireworks.”

Saying that people would be better donating their money to refugees, the animals rights activist said “there are already enough explosions in the world”. The calls came after a six-month-old beaver was killed on the outskirts of Berlin at the weekend when a group of children threw a firecracker into a pond.

The protected animal’s eardrum was perforated by the underwater explosion and it then drowned after suffering from shock, the Nature Protection Society said.

I’m so conflicted about this article. I hate seeing the photo of the dead beaver. I love reading that beavers are protected in Berlin. I hate reading some animal rights activist being used as a mouth piece to prevent fireworks, which the government has already been asking for already because of terror scares. I actually don’t personally like fireworks, but honestly animal rights activists are pretty despised already. Adding ‘no fireworks’ to the list is not going to improve their standing.

The strongest feeling, though, is that something about this story just feels wrong. Do beavers even have eardrums? Why didn’t the other beavers in his family also die from the loud disorienting noise? How do they know children threw in fireworks? I can’t find any other articles about the rascals being caught red-handed. Was there a necropsy performed on that beaver to show its ruptured ear drum? The results are in really fast if these were new year’s fireworks?

I am, of course, particularly interested because our own kit 2 & 3 died right after the fourth of July. We did worry about fireworks, but more about the chemical residue they leave in the water washing upstream with the high tide. Our kits didn’t drown, and no one said anything about a ruptured ear drum. But I’m going to keep asking questions.


 

On a brighter note this video is making the rounds again this morning, and well worth sharing. I told Rusty to get up early in April and film that lodge in Napa because this is going to be happening there too.

 

 

 


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Carlisle floods: bring back the trees, and the beavers!

The key to reducing the risk of more floods like those in Carlisle is to realise that conventional ‘flood defence’ can never provide security against the ever more extreme weather events that global warming will bring. We must embrace natural solutions to holding back flood waters: more trees; and bring back the beavers!

Trees are important for another reason too. They are food for beavers, and beavers use them to build their dams. And beavers will do all the work of damming up the streams and gullies for us, free of charge. And that’s absolutely key to restoring landcapes and making them water retentive.

We should therefore select water-loving species that are palatable to beavers – like poplars, willows, sallows and alders – and establish them along watercourses, ditches, streams, ponds and eroded upland gullies.

The dams would not just reduce flood risk: they would also prevent the summer droughts to which the area is also prone as a result of the rapid water drainage, and restore healthy river flows throughout the year.

I would not wish to pretend that every flooding event can be prevented by planting trees and restoring beavers. There will still be a role for orthodox ‘hard engineering’ in protecting vulnerable flood plain settlements. But that approach alone can never provide the protection we need, especially with the rising power and ferocity of the weather we must expect in a warming world.

It’s time for governments to move beyond the usual rhetoric of ‘flood defence’ and to move into a new era of rebuilding natural resilience to extreme climate events, using the gifts that nature herself has given us.

Can I get an amen?

Carlisle is across the Scottish border in Cumbria, which is just east of the Lake District of England. It was hit with severe storms causing the river to top its banks andmake flooding in December. Many, many families were forced to evacuate for the holidays. British soldiers were deployed to help out and keep peace. Damage to roads in Cumbria are already reported to cost upwards of 100 million pounds.

So, naturally, the Ecologist is writing about what nature could provide to prevent such damage. The author of the article happens to be the editor of the Ecologist, one Oliver Tickell, which explains the very positive press the Ecologist has been granting to beavers this year. I am mortally sombered at the damage, which we’ve heard very little about in the US. But grateful that folks are thinking about what ecosystem engineers could do to help.


Or should I say “Kit’s”?

?
“Gave proof through the night, that our beavers were still there.”

Picture proves beavers still thriving in Devon

In November the BBC reported the concerns of some local people that they had not had sightings of beavers on the River Otter for some weeks. This ‘disappearance’ was then reported by national newspapers. However, Devon Wildlife Trust has now come forward with evidence which shows that the beavers are still there, although they may have relocated their homes, known as lodges, along the river.

Devon Wildlife Trust is leading the River Otter Beaver Trial – a five year study of what is believed to be the first population of breeding beavers living wild in the English countryside for several centuries. The charity has said that it is currently monitoring four ‘active areas’ along the river where it has seen fresh evidence of the beavers’ presence.

Mark Elliott is the Trial’s manager and said:

“We knew the beavers had not ‘disappeared’ but it’s good to be able to report recent evidence showing that they are still active on the river. Beavers are mobile animals and it’s quite common for them to shift their lodges and feeding grounds. There’s lots of room for beavers on this river so it’s unsurprising that they have relocated from the places that we saw them last spring and summer.”

Whooo hoo! I’m a sucker for any story that has a chapter about missing beavers that suddenly show themselves to be doing just fine, thank you very much. Winter is a notoriously hard time to see beavers, whether they’re in Martinez or Napa or Devon. But it’s good to see sign, and it’s not very often that the media prints a photo of a beaver chewed tree with such joy. What a pleasure!

“As we move into the New Year and the daylight hours lengthen beavers will be active at dusk and dawn. If people do see them then it’s important they let us know so that we can get a clearer picture of the beavers’ numbers and locations.”

People with information can let the charity know if they see a beaver via email on beavers@devonwildlifetrust.org with details of the date, time, exact location and whether the beaver has a coloured ear tag.

The River Otter Beaver Trial receives no government funding. Devon Wildlife Trust is urging people to offer their support via its website

I’m pretty sure it’s good luck to drop a little coin in their beaver fountain and make a wish for Martinez beavers to show up too. In the mean time let’s just remember that beavers show themselves in mysterious ways and have a merry christmas!

1935860_782891731821604_3506532428881655280_nMeanwhile the New Jersey whiners are still complaining about beavers. Apparently the free help they received from BWW and Beaver Solutions just wasn’t help-y enough. And they need more deadly assistance right away.

Beavers’ Dams Flood Toms River Neighborhood

“Killing animals because we find them inconvenient should not be an option. Beavers are clever, industrious, family-oriented animals and necessary to the ecosystem and we now know it is possible to live beside them without conflict,” said Veronica Van Hof, executive director of Unexpected Wildlife Refuge.

The two most widely-used trapping methods are inefficient and inhuman, she said. As a result of the meeting with officials, she learned the township will likely use a trap that drowns the beaver or another that crushes the animal, snapping its neck.

Politicians Discussing Climate Change: Isaac Cordal

Sometimes when you throw the drowning man a rope he says, no not THAT rope. I want the other one. To tell the truth, I’m not really hopeful for Tom’s River. They’re just going to keep pushing headlines that say “beavers are flooding us” until the day after Christmas when they can start trapping.  But it’s good that Veronica is cutting her teeth so to speak. Now she needs to learn to stop saying nice things and start saying THIS WILL SAVE YOU MONEY. Which is also true and slightly harder to ignore.

Not that cities can’t choose to ignore anything they wish, of course.


This new short film will answer a lot of questions about what’s been going on near highway 37, it’s 5 days old and nicely made. We’re hoping they’re kind to beavers that show up. But the SLT  has lots of beaver friends  in their ranks. So I’m optimistic.

Enjoy.


A fairly adorable beaver story is making headlines today, this from Caledonia in America’s dairyland, a village in Racine that mysteriously enacted special laws to become an actual designated ‘village’. Let’s just saw they’re a little quirky and enjoy their unique style in this article.

Caledonia officer helps beaver find new home

56733605ec88b.imageCALEDONIA — A Caledonia police officer got a furry surprise on a call Wednesday near Johnson Park.

“It was the last thing I’d thought I’d see,” Officer Andrew Gelden said. “But there it was: a beaver in the roadway.”

Gelden was dispatched just after 3 p.m. Wednesday, when the department received a call about a beaver “hanging out” in the middle of 3 Mile Road just east of Johnson Park. A self-professed animal person, Gelden arrived on the scene, scooped up the beaver and put it in the back of his squad car.

The beaver did not appear to be injured, according to Gelden, and he quickly located a new home for the critter.

56733605b7683.image
Beaver in squad car

“I know they like water, and so I moved it over by a pond,” Gelden said.

Gelden said the beaver was very calm, and after he set it down near the pond, it “just kind of sat there” looking at him for a while. In all, Gelden said it took him five minutes to get the beaver to safety.

Ohh! He looks a little scared back there, don’t you think? Well most of us feel scared in the back seat of a police car. I’m glad the officer picked him up off the road. I wouldn’t think he’d be dispersing at this time of year, but I he might not have a calendar. The weather was below 30 last night, so ponds must be starting to freeze.I guess compared to lots and lots of folks that’s a pretty adorable mug shot. It sounds like the officer was very kind and very Wisconsiny. Which was lucky for him, and makes a nice story for us.

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