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

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Yearling grooming-Photo Cheryl Reynolds

The Rossmoor Nature Association (RNA) is hosting an informative lecture and slide show on Wednesday November 14th at 3:00 p.m. in the Peacock Hall at Gateway. The speaker for this fascinating program about urban beavers will be Dr. Heidi Perryman a noted local beaver advocate and founder of the “Worth A Dam” educational organization. As improbable as it might seem, beavers are living comfortably in downtown Martinez—however, their presence there has not been without heated controversy.

Heidi Perryman, Ph.D., is a child psychologist with a private practice in Lafayette. She is also a board member of the John Muir Association at the National Historic Site in Martinez and became an accidental beaver advocate when she started filming the Martinez beavers in 2006. She started the organization “Worth A Dam” to manage their continued care and educate others about their value in the watershed. She has been particularly interested in the way that the beavers’ struggle has connected residents more closely to their environment, to their city government and to each other.

In addition to a very popular annual beaver festival, Worth A Dam does several community outreach and educational programs a year, including fieldtrips and class room visits. Dr. Perryman has also collaborated with beaver management expert Michael Callahan of Massachusetts to help release an instructional DVD teaching how to live with beavers (featuring footage of the Martinez Beavers). Most recently she worked with an historian, archeologist and biologist to publish groundbreaking research on the western fur trade and the original prevalence of beavers in California – a subject that has been surprisingly misunderstood for a nearly a century.

The beaver (Castor canadensis) is the largest rodent in North America and the only land mammal with a broad flat tail. Beavers and their ingenious dams help to create wetlands, store and filter water, augment fish populations, raise the number of migratory and songbirds, and have a dramatic positive impact on wildlife. Dr. Perryman feels that working to help people understand and coexist with this single species will continue to have a dramatic trickle-down impact on the environment in general. The Peacock Hall’s doors will open at 2:30 p.m. and the program will begin at 3:00. The length of the presentation will be approximately 60 min. with time for questions afterward. Visitors are always welcome to attend any of the RNA’s activities. For information about the Rossmoor Nature Association’s program series, contact Penny Ittner at 891-4980 or by e-mail at pennyittner@comcast.net. Related attachment (1st week): Beaver1bw Caption: “The North American Beaver”.


Gary Bogue is retiring

Can you believe it? Today appeared his very last column. All the years of good advice and hard work will end with some much-deserved rest. Gary’s done a lot for pet owners and wildlife over the years, but I cannot exaggerate in the slightest sense how important he was to saving the Martinez Beavers. It was Gary who pushed for a common-sense humane solution and Gary who was the voice of reason from the Times when everyone was ready to believe all the city’s lies about the trouble they were causing.

In fact, so long ago that I can barely remember, the wildlife biologist from the SF Chapter of the Sierra Club invited me to their board meeting because she wanted to push them to adopt a position paper on the Martinez Beavers. As you may know the Sierra Club has never made a habit of worrying about wildlife, or beavers, they are more concerned with wild spaces. I drove at night to a dingy office building on San Pablo Ave where an unbelievably large number of strangers sat in a room making very dry, foreign-sounding decisions. I showed some beaver photos and said a few words, a few folks hemmed and hawed and then they voted. Afterwards the president took me aside and said very quietly that I should thank Gary Bogue. Because he was their respected friend of many years and had pushed for this action to happen behind the scenes. They wouldn’t have gotten involved without him, and the city would probably not have halted the train without them.

I thought such an important occasion needed an important goodbye, so I sent him this last week. Enjoy it and stop by his column to comment a few words of your own. So long Gary, and thanks for all the fish!

There are ‘possums in my pantry
There are raccoons on my roof
When I come back from vacation my new kitten acts aloof.

There are ducklings in the drainpipe
There are snakes beneath the stair
We need volunteers at Lindsay to assist with wildlife there.

Never fear, the answer’s local
And the naturalist is vocal
If it’s feathered, scaled or hairy
We would send a note to Gary

There are gophers in my garden
There are foxes on the fence
‘Pug’, the guinea pig went missing and we haven’t seen him since.

There are bats inside the basement
There are spiders on the sills
My dog just chased a porcupine now his nose is full of quills.

Never fear, the answer’s local
And the naturalist is vocal
If it’s feathered, scaled or hairy
We can send a note to Gary

There are beavers in Martinez
There wolves in Walnut Creek
And my poodle was abducted by an eagle in its beak.

My neighbor wants to shoot them
But my kids enjoy the sight
So which of us belongs here? Which one of us is right?

Never fear, the answer’s local
And the naturalist is vocal
If it’s feathered, scaled or hairy
We could send a note to Gary

But the naturalist is tired now
And he’s earned a bit of rest
Of all the columns in the Times we loved his words the best.

There is so much that he has given us
Gentle wisdom to recall
We will keep his teaching with us as our urban borders sprawl.

Never fear, the answer’s local
And the naturalist was vocal
If it’s feathered, scaled or hairy
It will thank our good friend Gary!

With Love from Worth A Dam

She and others worked REALLY hard to get rid of trapping and save some beavers in Cornwall Ontario, which sits right above New York State. They protested, talked to the media, and generally made an obstacle of themselves and guess what happened? Always remember what Gandhi said

First they ignore you
Then they laugh at you
Then they fight with you
Then you win.

Posted by Mike Callahan on the Beaver Management Forum. Photos courtesy of Rebecca Sorrell.

Great Beaver News from Ontario!

I returned home today from a fabulous trip north of the border to Cornwall, Ontario. It was a fantastic week full of fun, good conversations, and lots of hot, hard and rewarding work installing flow devices.

As you may recall from recent BMF posts, The Association for the Protection of Fur-Bearing Animals based in Vancouver, offered the financial support and expertise to install the first flow devices in the city of Cornwall, Ontario. They also kindly paid me to assist them with the flow device installations.

I’d like to give big kudos to Adrian Nelson of FBD. He really impressed me with his ability to work with local officials, obtain all the right materials and tools, design the proper flow device for each of four sites, and teach the local volunteers how to build and install the devices. He was so good that my expertise was barely needed. I agreed completely with his plan for all four sites.

Adrian is quickly becoming North America’s west coast flow device expert!

A major highlight of my trip to Ontario was meeting the inspirational leader of the campaign to save Cornwall’s beavers from continued trapping. Her name is Rebecca Sorrell and she just joined our Beaver Management Forum. Welcome Rebecca! Never doubt that one determined and passionate person can be the catalyst for positive change. She has rallied many other good people in Cornwall and together they are making the city change its trap first policy.

Rebecca and many in her large group of passionate volunteers were actively involved with the flow device installations and are taking responsibility for monitoring and maintaining them to ensure long-term success. In addition, they plan on installing more flow devices themselves if the city has beaver conflicts elsewhere! They are a dedicated bunch, led by a special and inspirational person, and with our Forum’s support and assistance I am sure they will succeed!

Donna, Gary and Kate, our Ottawa-Carleton Wildlife Center beaver friends made the trip to Cornwall and were also very helpful and a delight to spend time with. Hopefully our work in Cornwall will inspire / embarrass the politicians in the Capital city of Ottawa to finally embrace flow devices. Good luck to these dedicated beaver friends as they continue their struggle in their nation’s Capital.

There was some good local media coverage in Cornwall which is so important to educate the public. Hopefully Rebecca can post the links and maybe a few pictures of the installs here for everyone to see.

Finally, it was a pleasure and honor to work with all these good folks as we all continue to spread the word about the importance of beavers and the effectiveness of flow devices.

A hearty congratulations to Rebecca and friends, Adrian and Furbearer Defenders, and Mike who drove across several states to get there! I hope your hard work reminds everyone that people can make a difference, that even tricky problems have humane solutions, and that beavers are worth a dam or two!

Speaking of dams, apparently our beavers are so highly regarded that this morning even an angel came to visit  them.

Angel Visits Beaver Dam - Great Egret by Heidi Perryman


Federation of Flyfishers: Northern California Council

Flyfishermen tend to be a classy, patient, breed. Apparently they are also at the head of their class when it comes to learning about the way beavers and their dams benefit salmonids. Just check out Dougald Scott’s article in the June issue of “The River Mouth”. Dougald is on the board of directors for the Northern California/Nevada Council Federation of FlyFishers, and came to the first California Working Beaver Group meeting in January. Let’s just say he’s a friend in the right place! Oh, and check out those LOVELY beaver photos!

You’ll really want to read the whole thing, which isn’t online yet,  so click here for a sneak preview pdf of the article and lets hope folks at CDFG really start to pay attention!


Leave It to Beavers

Can they help us adapt to climate change?
By David Ferry Atlantic Monthly

Now, nearly two centuries later [after the fur trade], beavers are valued not just for their pelts, but for the environmental benefits of their gnawing and nesting. A growing community of “beaver believers” is reintroducing the animal to regional water systems throughout the American West in the hopes of reducing the incidence of floods and the damage from forest fires, alleviating drought, helping fish thrive, and conserving fresh water—in the process, helping to combat some of the effects of climate change.

Well, did you see the release of the long-awaited beaver article from the Atlantic Monthly yesterday? The author David Ferry contacted me way back before Christmas and we talked beavers and the beavers’ impact on our little stream. He had gotten my name from Brock Dolman who had filled him with lots of great quotes and beaver information. Since he was just around the corner in Oakland I invited him out for a viewing, although as it was winter and I wasn’t sure what he would see.

On December 7th, 2011 we bundled up in warm clothes and met at the beaver dam. David was a journalism grad student at UCB and we discovered a friend in common, Richie Parks the former editor of the Martinez Gazette who ironically prides himself to this day on having ‘broke’ the beaver story. We showed David  the dams and then stood at the Escobar bridge to see what might transpire.

I remember that night not only because I knew Martinez would be in the Atlantic Monthly but because the beavers were acting very, very differently. The two larger beavers that sleep up by the primary were vocalizing loudly — more loudly than I had ever heard them before. Not in distress, just emphatic. They were swimming around each other in circles, and calling to each other. They came one after another right under the bridge, and we used our light to show David a lovely glimpse of them under clear water – every lovely detail visible right down to their flapping webbed feet. I remember he gasped.

What was the vocalizing about? We never found out. We haven’t heard such noises since they were babies and never that loud. Maybe it was just clever marketing! Since it was winter we wondered whether it might have something to do with mating rights, but who could know? David was just happy to see beavers up close, and we made sure he left with a hat, brochures and photos. Since the California working beaver meeting was coming up the following month, I suggested Brock invite him to attend, which Brock thought was a great idea. 

David wasn’t able to come to the meeting, but several months later I was contacted by the Atlantic monthly for a ‘fact checking’ interview. Where was Martinez? Did David really come that night? Did we really see two beavers? Were they really called ‘yearlings’? If you were ever concerned that fact-checking has disappeared from modern media you should be comforted at least that it still happens on the staff of the Atlantic. At the time I asked if it might be possible for us to get a few extra copies for the City Council, and was assured they would be mailed. All 5 copies just arrived!

Since national magazines are finite spaces with multiple demands for content and legions of red-penned editors lurking at every corner, very little of that visit made it into the article. I am very sorry that there was no mention of the flow device, the struggle to keep the beavers, or most importantly WORTH A DAM but still grateful to show a national audience that Martinez is one place you can reliably see beavers. This is all that remains of that cold December night

To see a beaver today, I drove some 30 miles from Oakland, where I live, to suburban Martinez, California, where a beaver family has moved into the creek that cuts through town. There, a delightful beaver-believer couple showed me around the colony, pointing out the subtleties of beaver construction and anatomy, as a pair of yearlings swam below us.

Well, the article is the beginning of a great discussion about the benefits of beavers that should turn into a national dialogue and eventually a policy shift – certainly in California! And even though the name of WORTH A DAM is lost on some editing room floor somewhere, I doubt the name of MARTINEZ has ever been in the Atlantic before and that is definitely something to celebrate. If people google ‘Martinez’ and ‘Beavers’ they are sure to wind up here eventually! Just one comment about something they missed with all the careful fact-checking: No one ever even asked me this….

Are the two of you, in fact, ‘Delightful’?

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