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

Category: Friends of Martinez Beavers


This has been a fairly auspicious week for beavers. Their benefits have been touted in the CA wine country, Illinois and now the UK. I hope all this good press doesn’t go to their heads. This fine offering is from science writer Roger Harrabin

Beaver return ‘benefits environment’

Beavers should be re-introduced to England to improve water supplies, prevent floods and tackle soil loss, a researcher says. New results from a trial in Devon show muddy water entering a beaver wetland is three times cleaner when it leaves.

The farmers’ union, NFU, warns that beavers brought back to Scotland have damaged fields and forestry. But Prof Richard Brazier, who runs the Devon trial, says farmers should thank beavers for cleaning up farm pollution.

Unpublished preliminary results from his tests for Exeter University showed that a pair of beavers introduced six years ago have created 13 ponds on 183m of a stream. The ponds trapped a total of 16 tonnes of carbon and one tonne of nitrogen – a fertiliser that in large quantities harms water supplies.

During heavy rains, water monitored entering the site has been thick with run-off soil from farm fields – but the soil and fertilisers have been filtered out of the water by the network of dams.

“We see quite a lot of soil erosion from agricultural land round here (near Okehampton),” he told BBC News.

“Our trial has shown that the beavers are able to dam our streams in a way that keeps soil in the headwaters of our catchment so it doesn’t clog up rivers downstream and pollute our drinking and bathing waters. “Farmers should be happy that beavers are solving some of the problems that intensive farming creates.

“If we bring beavers back it’s just one tool we need to solve Britain’s crisis of soil loss and diffuse agricultural pollution of waterways, but it’s a useful tool.”

16 tons of carbon and 1 ton of nitrogen!  That’s pretty impressive, even if they do spell it with an E. It refers to the metric ton, which is actually bigger than ours. So that small trial beaver population is making a HUGE difference. It’s startling that they’re maintaining 13 dams, because that’s so much work. I assume the idea is diffusing the water force over many dams makes the threat to any single one less, and the repairs needed smaller. I wonder what our beavers would have done if they were given the run of the place and endless supplies of trees. The most we ever had was 5, but I’m sure if they had been allowed to flood out escobar street they might have advanced.

Of course it’s a ‘both sides’ article so it interviews Dr. Negative Nellie from pain in the arse university, too.

Another soil expert, Professor Jane Rickson from Cranfield University, is yet to be convinced about the multiple benefits of these hard-working, continental night workers.

She told BBC News any beaver dams must be “leaky” – so they don’t hold back large volumes of water that might be released all at once in an extreme flood event.

She agreed that in some places the UK was suffering a crisis of soil loss, and said new policies were urgently needed.

But, she said, beavers might reduce the river channel, increasing the risk of flooding – or, in areas of poor cover, they might remove vegetation, expose soil and thus increase erosion.

A spokesperson from the Environment Agency was also lukewarm about beavers, saying: “Natural and hard flood defences both have an important role in keeping communities safe – though introducing beavers does not form part of our approach.”

The authorities are wary of mass beaver re-colonisation of England, following the controversy over beaver re-introduction in Scotland – where they are now protected species after a trial by the Scottish government.

In Tayside, some land owners have angrily complained about beaver damage to commercial forests and fields, and others objected to the £2m cost of the trial.

Yes yes, beaver dams are leaky. It’s one of their great benefits since the water that passes through them comes out cleaner on the other side. And you are doing a very good job as the “might” patrol; thinking of all the harm that beavers might cause. There’s a really fun video on the site that I don’t think I can share here, although I’m still trying. Go watch it because it’s that good and short.

This is NOT a beaver

And of course a photo of a nutria/coypu instead of a beaver because hey, why the hell not?

 

 

Meanwhile we received word that we got our grants from both Kiwanis and the Martinez Community Foundation yesterday, so thank you both so very much and we are looking prepared for beaver festival 10. Planning meeting tomorrow and all is right on schedule!

 

 


memorial beaver dayI think on this memorial day in addition to remembering the heroes who gave their lives we should take 5 minutes to remember fallen beavers as well. Think about it, they were trying to give us great service and struck down in the line of duty. No one can count all the beavers that died in the fur trade, or by depredation since, but Martinez has 13 beavers to remember on memorial day. The 4 2015 kits and the yearling, the 4 2009 kits, three yearlings that died from round worm parasite in 2oo8, and mom in 2010. That’s a lot of beavers.

5 minutes isn’t much out of a whole day. I just wanted to reflect for a moment on our unlucky number.


marinNow, it’s time for good news about the upcoming talk I’ll be doing at Marin Audubon in 10 days. They came out with their newsletter yesterday and Martinez is on the front page.  Let’s hope that it not only drags out curious folks on a Thursday evening, but generates support for the Marin beaver reintroduction plan. It will take a second to load, but be patient. (You can zoom in on the article using the + sign.)

TheRail_June2017_Web

More good news, this time from Rusty Cohn of Napatopia. He ran into a couple from France last night looking for an American beaver sighting!

I met a young couple (from France?) who did some research as they wanted to see a Beaver. They said they checked the internet and found Worth a Dam and ended up in Napa. They had been to Canada and no Beaver sighting, Yellowstone maybe a glance and then got to Napa where they got to stand and watch one for 15 minutes or more and even saw two swimming together.  Thought you might get a kick out of this. There was also a Great Blue Heron and Black Crowned Night Heron there for good measure!

That’s wonderful Rusty! Thanks so much for sharing. Another good reason to maintain this website.  And may our European friends return home with great stories of how people in the states coexist with beavers!


Meanwhile in Oregon, they had another beaver event Thursday Night based on the Beaver Tales Art show. They have been slowly drawing such important folks out of the woodwork to talk about beaver benefits. Thursday it was the turn of retired biology teacher turned wildlife photographer Neil Maine.

NEAL MAINE, SCIENTIST AND WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHER TO PRESENT A LECTURE ON BEAVER ECOLOGY MAY 25TH 7-8PM

To celebrate beavers and their contribution to the ecology of the North Coast, the nonprofit organizations have teamed up with local businesses to host the Beaver Tales Art Exhibit and Sale in Seaside. The purpose of the exhibit is to highlight the importance of beavers in creating wetlands and other aquatic habitat.

Neal Maine will explain how beavers engineer wetlands on the North Coast, and how people can learn to take advantage of their environmental benefits while protecting property from flooding and other damage. Maine’s vast experience in studying and photographing wildlife enables him to tell fascinating stories about these industrious little rodents that most people never se

This is probably a relative of the beavers currently working Stanley Marsh; Neal Maine caught this beaver in action at Thompson Creek a couple of years ago.

Here I was thinking what a negligent lapse it was that I didn’t already know who Neil Maine was  until I saw I had already written about him way back in 2015 when the North Coast Land Conservancy used this photo for their great restoration project letting beavers do the restoration at Stanley Marsh.

(And just in case you’re wondering yes, that actually looks like a muskrat to me too.)

Anyway Neil has definitely photographed real beavers as well, and I’m sure he had an awesome presentation that evening. The articles I saw offered a couple amazing photos of his that were definitely not muskrat-y. The art show Beaver Tales has really put together a fantastic beaver ad-campaign whose benefits will be felt for years. Kudos to the Wetland Conservancy and the North Coast Land Trust  for pulling it off.

When you think of it, it’s pretty darned generous of beavers to groom every day just so that we get a nice chance to photograph them.

North Coast Beaver by Neal Maine

 


Remember the barren ol’ beaver reporting days, when there were no news stories to catch up with and one reporter a month wrote about the crazy idea of beaver benefits? I would have to wrack my brain thinking of things to scribble about here, ask a question or describe the behavior of our ACTUAL beavers.

Sigh. We used to have actual beavers!

Well. nowadays, waking up to three beaver stories is a slow day.  Seems everyone is hopping on the beaver bandwagon. So I thought I’d share the cream of the crop with you this morning.

City of Mill Creek to implement innovative approach to preserve beaver habitat while reducing flooding

The City of Mill Creek WA will install new tools to help preserve beaver habitat while reducing 35th Avenue SE flooding on Friday, May 5, 2017.

Beavers are to blame for many of the woes of travelers on the Mill Creek portion of 35th Avenue SE. Beaver dams, which appear very quickly, hold back the flow of water under the bridge at 144th Street SE as it curves into 30th Avenue SE. The wetlands at the mouth of Penny Creek then flood across 35th Avenue SE by Thomas Lake, which results in road closures.

In the past, the City has removed beaver dams as they appear. From spring through fall, this is almost a weekly occurrence.

Now, thanks to a Hydraulic Project Approval permit from the Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife, the City will install two flexible levelers to allow the beavers to build a dam across Penny Creek at 144th Street SE to the north of the bridge in the City’s Highland Trails neighborhood. The flexible levelers will allow water to flow through the beaver dam and not disturb the dam.

“One of the goals of the City’s Surface Water Utility program is to rehabilitate stream and drainage corridors to benefit wildlife habitat,” said Marci Chew, Mill Creek surface water specialist. “This solution will enable us to prevent flooding while preserving the beaver habitat.”

Designed by beaver specialists, the flexible leveler is a system made from double-walled corrugated plastic pipe, which extends 20 feet from the wetland area and under the beaver dam. The pipe mouth is protected by cattle fencing, which prevents beavers from entering it or blocking it. The pipe is also anchored in place and staked every six feet to prevent movement. Water is then able to exit the wetlands without an impact to the beavers.

Wow. Just Wow. Do you ever have those moments when you feel like the world has moved forward so gosh darned much you aren’t sure you even recognize it? I went looking for “Beavers Northwest” who is installing this and found the slick glossy website of our friend Ben Dittbrenner and his merry band of beaver brothers. One of whom is our VERY long-time friend Jake Jacobsen who was kind enough to give advice way back in the dawning days of our beaver problems. Go check it out because the site has grown up a lot since I introduced it to you a few years ago. And while you’re there take a moment to notice the sites they recommend visiting, because it ain’t us. 🙁

There are a couple puzzling things in this very expository-rich  article. First of all it says the pipe goes under the dam, which I’m sure is just a simple misunderstanding, it goes over the dam except for in the Clemson design which is why their such a pain to install. Second of all it says the leveler uses double walled pipe which I’m sure Mike Callahan’s design doesn’t. Skip’s Castor Master design does. We just spoke about it the other day and Mike said,

“Yes, but I use them sparingly, rarely more than a 10 foot section and almost always joined to some single wall pipe. In my experience, double wall pipes have the issue of being difficult to keep submerged. The can pop up at any time for no apparent reason.  I had that issue too with 40 foot double wall pipes, but not when I use only a 10 foot double wall section connected to a single wall pipe. Then it almost always stays submerged indefinitely.”

Combined with this is the fact that Mike doesn’t really  use the term “Flexible Leveler” anymore, but says pond leveler instead. So it’s funny to see this device described with the wrong name bearing the wrong pipe is described as ‘invented’ by unnamed beaver specialists?

What’s not strange at all is having beaver specialists now in EVERY pacific state. Jacob Shockley in Oregon, Ben and his crew in Washington and Kevin Swift in California. (Along with Ted and Sherry Guzzi of course). The world is certainly a very different place than it was a decade ago.


Meanwhile, this article from Pennsylvania reminds us that just because you call something a ‘beaver deceiver’ doesn’t mean it is one.

Beavers outwitting ‘deceivers’ on Milford Twp. property

MILFORD TWP., Pa. – The old adage “busy as a beaver” is definitely holding true on the two-acre property of a Milford Township woman.

Linda Weikert, who lives in the 1600 block of Fennel Road, came before the Milford Township Board of Supervisors Monday night looking for answers on how to avoid the probable flooding of her basement due to beavers in the area; the animals are building and maintaining — sometimes overnight — more than 100 feet of dams, now resulting in the formation of lakes and ponds on her property.

The resident said the beavers even have discovered a way around the “beaver deceiver” metal apparatus installed by the township and designed to stop dam-building in specific areas. 

She said she has gone out with tools to loosen parts of the dam, however, she said the beavers work overnight rebuilding what has been disabled the preceding day.

“Should I now get flood insurance for my house?” Weikert asked the supervisors.

Township Manager Jeff Vey said a meeting on the matter needs to be called, including representatives from the government agencies.

Weikert said there is an upside from the damming: wildlife has increased, including minks, blue heron, ducks, kingfishers and various turtle breeds previously placed on the state’s endangered species list.

Okay, hurray that they used any technique at all to stop beaver damming in Pennsylvania besides trapping. But I’m going to go out on a limb and predict with absolutely certainty that whatever they installed wasn’t a ‘beaver deceiver’. Which is a specific term for a specific design invented by Skip Lisle. Even what we had in Martinez wasn’t a beaver deceiver. Although people say it was all the time.

The problem with using these names casually is that when the city installs their ridiculous metal T pipe and call it a ‘beaver deceiver’ then predictaly find out it doesn’t work, articles like this tell people that BEAVER DECEIVERS DON’T WORK. And folks think its true. Remember it’s not just a name. It’s a specific tool used skillfully with technique involved.

If I gave you heart surgery in my living room with my knitting needles and it failed it wouldn’t mean heart surgery doesn’t work.

Last night Amelia Hunter sent her final design for this year’s festival. She’s off now to Indonesia for a long trip so we’re grateful she squeezed us in before boarding! I think this will be an excellent 10th anniversary announcement, and I’m sure it will do a great job in linking Martinez to Beavers forever. I also think it looks kind of like a ‘help wanted’ ad for the next beavers that might come up the strait.

Higher Quality X


It’s never too early to start blaming beaver for flooding that may or may not happen. Whenever a city fails to check its culverts or clear its roadways, there’s an easy ‘out’. Apparently even the governor of North Carolina knows how this game is played.

Authorities warn about flooding

State and local emergency officials are expecting area flooding this week with the Tar River cresting Tuesday night. Conditions in Rocky Mount and throughout the Twin Counties have worsened due to heavy rains over the past three days.

Rainfall of nearly seven inches locally and an upstream flow into the Tar River will impact local water levels. The most recent numbers by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s prediction service indicated the Tar River would crest at 9 p.m. Tuesday at 26.9 feet as measured at the Atlantic Avenue gauge. Major flood stage at that location is 25 feet.

Gov. Roy Cooper said flooding and evacuations are possible in Tarboro and Greenville as rivers crest in those areas.

“In the past 24 hours, we’ve seen rainfall like we haven’t seen since Hurricane Matthew,” Cooper said. “We know floodwaters can be deadly and I urge everyone to be cautious and stay safe.”

The flooding is due to beaver dams in the Cokey Swamp, Williford said, adding that he’s complained to city officials and the U.S. Agriculture Department. Every so often, city workers will come out and knock down the dams, but the busy beavers rebuild them almost immediately.

“Even during a dry spell the creek is full,” Williford said. “Just a little rain and it’s flooding our backyards.”

That’s right. The water caused by beaver dams is WORSE than Hurricane Matthew. Because beavers are terrible horrible no-good very bad things. And the city staff has tried and tried fixing the problem with their backhoes and hello kitty dolls but it didn’t work. What’s a governor to do? The dam things just build them again!

Never mind that in a hard rain the dams would have been flooded or blown out so they can hardly be causing that problem. Never mind that you let a year of bad conditions accumulate and decided to blame an animal for your irresponsibility.  I’m sure you’re flooded playgrounds are ENTIRELY because of beaver dams. Because you know how beavers like to store water near play equipment.

Sheesh.


On to better news. Jos Bakker lives in Auke Bay, Alaska (which is just north of Juneau) and sometimes posts beaver tidbits on the Beaver Management Forum Facebook page. This was a recent offering which is among the most stunning beaver display I’ve seen captured on film. Ever. (And remember that when it comes to seeing beaver feats on film I’m something of a connoisseur.) Just see for yourself.

Not only is it great footage of a beaver walking upright, perfectly mirrored in the reflection of the water, at .30 sec  it also shows the beaver scent marking, which I have never witnessed. That little wiggle as he steps over his mud pile is the calling card he’s leaving, either to say “girl wanted” or “keep out”. I am so very impressed with this film. Apparently Jos is a photographer and naturalist of note in the area. We are grateful for your sharing it with us!

DONATE

TREE PROTECTION

BAY AREA PODCAST

Our story told around the county

Beaver Interactive: Click to view

LASSIE INVENTS BDA

URBAN BEAVERS

LASSIE AND BEAVERS

Ten Years

The Beaver Cheat Sheet

Restoration

RANGER RICK

Ranger rick

The meeting that started it all

Past Reports

November 2024
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930  

Story By Year

close

Share the beaver gospel!