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

Category: Friends of Martinez Beavers


It’s official! Yesterday I turned in the application for this year’s Beaver Festival which will be August 7th from 11-4. We are hoping for an “estuary awareness” car to bring passengers on Amtrak from the Jack London Square with the watershed appreciation of Lisa Owens-Viani. We are hoping for five hours of remarkable music, face painting, beaver tours and naturalist walks with Doc Hale. We are hoping for the children’s cloth drawings to be converted to a flag that we unveil at the festival. We are hoping for an excellent silent auction with donations from Safari West, Wild Birds, Six Flags, the Monterey Bay Aquarium and the Marine Mammal Center! We are hoping for the best attendance ever and the entire event to be sponsored by Castoro Cellars.

We dream big.

We are also hoping for YOU! So if you plan to be in town that day, would like to help out in anyway including transport, setup, take down, organization, musical delights, children’s activities, manning the book table, helping with sales, recruiting attendance, hanging up signs, taking down signs, having your daughter’s swim team sell water bottles, or offering a service so valueable I haven’t yet thought of it, drop me a note! It takes a VILLAGE to make a beaver festival.

Yesterday I had a very exciting chat with Julia Reischel of the Watershed Post. I had contacted her after reading her review of Mike Callahan’s presentation at the state house. Apparently I came close to giving her a “Road to Damascus moment” and she is now very interested in the role beavers might play in watershed restoration. She was delightful on the phone, and wanted to know who the “big names were” in beaver research so she could follow up. Why hadn’t she heard about the effect beavers have on birds? the effect beavers have on salmon? the use of beavers to combat climate change?

Sigh.

I honestly have no idea. Talk about hiding beavers’ light under a bushel. With the exception of Michael Pollock there really are no “big names” associated with this important research, and his name isn’t NEARLY big enough to make a dent in all the ridiculous lies that are being told about beavers by the salmon industry in Scotland. Research gets done, but its done by doctoral candidates because no one else wants to step into that mire.I sent her in the direction of Dietland Muller-Swarze who teaches right down the street.

Still, start with the dissertations. Its a great beginning. The rest will follow.


The mistress of this website had a computer hazard this week which meant there could be no grand discussions of beavers or the fur trade, only panicked snatches from the laptop. A very nice man, recommended by beaver friend LB, came to perform herculean repairs and shook his finger gravely at the piles and piles of dusty beaver information in the hard drive. It’s time for a new system he said.

Preaching to the choir, I said! Bring on the new wide open spaces to fill with beavers! So our first computer, in 1987, had a whopping 20 MB hard drive and cost us equivalent of half a new car. This new machine will be equipped with a Terabyte, which is equal to 1,048,576 (1,0242) megabytes and cost us less than a new set of tires. That must be progress! I guess that should be enough room for all kinds of beaver footage!

And speaking of extra bytes, we were noticing this week that mom beaver always goes home in the morning with a little something to nibble on. She carries a branch for mid-day snacking, and brings it usually from great distances. It’s a unique behavior, nobody else does it with such regularity. We aren’t sure if she just gets hungry in the interim, or maybe is conditioned from a lifetime of kit rearing to bring something for a snack, but it helps identify her. If you stop by the dam one morning and see a beaver coming back with something in its mouth, check its tail for a notch, because its probably mom!


My very first beaver friend, Bob Arnebeck, posted video this winter of he and his wife helping a deer stuck on the ice. It’s lovely to watch, enjoy!

Show me the man, woman or child who can watch this without thinking of this magical scene….


Our Wikipedia beaver friend has been doing an amazing job researching beaver in the Sierras. Check out his recent updates. The photo is from moonshine Ink, where I first learned about the Kings Beach Beavers being killed because they “weren’t native”.

Historical range and distribution

In 1916, Harold Bryant wrote in California Fish and Game, “The beaver of our mountain districts has been entirely exterminated and there are but a few hundred survivors to be found along the Sacramento, Colorado and San Joaquin Rivers.”[2]. Later twentieth century naturalists (Grinnell, Tappe, etc.) questioned whether the California Golden beaver dwelt above 1,000 feet (300 m) of elevation in the Sierra[3][4], but evidence that they lived throughout the Sierras, including the high country, is mounting.

California Golden beaver taken from Snelling, California (elevation 256 ft/78 m and Waterford, California (elevation 51 ft/16 m) were stocked in 1940 at Mather Station (elevation 4,522 ft/1,378 m) west of Yosemite National Park and in 1944 at Fish Camp (elevation 5,062 ft/1,543 m) by the California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG). These native “Central Valley” beaver have been building dams and rearing young successfully for 70 years at elevations in and near Yosemite at elevations higher than 5,000 feet (1,500 m).[5]

A 500-1,000 year old Yokut Indian pictograph of a beaver at Painted Rock is located above 1,600 feet (500 m) of elevation in the southern Sierra Nevada on the Tule Indian Reservation.[6][7]

There are two Beaver Creeks in California, one in Amador County that begins at 6,000 feet (1,800 m) and descends to 3,300 feet (1,000 m) where it joins the Bear River (a tributary of the Mokelumne River) and one that begins at 7,400 feet (2,300 m) and descends to 2,500 feet (800 m) where it joins the North Fork of the Stanislaus River. The second Beaver Creek in Tuolumne County has a Little Beaver Creek tributary that joins it 8 miles southwest of Liberty Hill, California and is now known as Crane Creek.[8][9] There is also a Beaver Canyon in the southern Sierra at elevations above 2,000 feet at the confluence of Delonegha Creek with the Kern River.[10] Because the Hudson’s Bay Company intentionally trapped the beaver in California to near extinction to prevent American settlement, there is a paucity of place names with the word “beaver” in the State.[11] However, the Beaver place names in the Sierra could be named for the unrelated Mountain Beaver (Aplodontia rufa).

Why did Grinnell and Tappe write that there were no California Golden beaver over 1,000 feet in the Sierras? McIntyre hypothesized that beaver were trapped out of the Sierras early in the nineteenth century by trappers before records could be kept.[5] Fur brigades employed by large commercial enterprises such as the Rocky Mountain Fur Company, the American Fur Company, and the Hudson’s Bay Company drew American exploration west to the Pacific. The Hudson’s Bay Company purposefully tried to extirpate beaver in California and Oregon to stifle American intrusion into these states and create a “fur desert”. Early records show that by the 1830’s, American fur brigades were in the Sierras. Fur trapper Stephen Hall Meek, wrote in his brief autobiography, “We got too far West, and finally started down the Mary’s, or Humboldt river for California, over a country entirely unknown to trappers. We discovered Truckee, Carson and Walker rivers, Donner lake and Walker’s pass, through which we went and pitched our camp for the winter on the shore of Tulare Lake, in December, 1833.”[12] With few exceptions, these mountain men left few detailed records.

It may have been easier to trap out beaver in the Sierra Nevada than the beaver of the Delta. The beaver in the rivers of the Central Valley did not have to build dams since there was plenty of deep water to provide food and shelter, whereas mountain beaver have to impound streams to create deep water. The easiest way to trap beaver is to remove a few sticks from their dam, and set a trap to catch them when they come to make repairs.[13] Thus, it may have been much easier to trap out dam-building beavers in the foothills and mountains than the non-dam building beavers near sea level in the California Delta. Grinnell states, “Beavers living in banks frequently leave little sign, and it is sometimes difficult to find places to set traps for them.”[14] Grinnell also pointed out (after lamenting the lifting of the 1911-1925 moratorium on beaver trapping) that many parts of the Delta were inaccessible to trappers, “A few are left in sloughs with the “islands”, where trappers do not go.”[15] Well before the end of the nineteenth century these factors could have left the mountains bereft of beaver and concentrated the surviving, albeit decimated Golden beaver populations in the Delta.


Beaver friend, Brock Dolman of the OAEC (and featured speaker at John Muir Birthday Earth day!) rushed back from Redding to breathlessly describe the electric salmonid restoration conference he helped host which featured some surprisingly familiar faces. A shining star of the event was our new pal Michael Pollock talking about–you guessed it–the relationship between beavers and salmon. I don’t exactly have Brock’s permission to share the email but he didn’t exactly say not to either and I can’t be expected to keep news like this to myself. It’s THAT good!!!

Just back from an amazingly successful Salmonid Restoration Conference, where I moderated a 1/2 day session titled “Instream Flows for Salmonids” which had Michael Pollock as the final speaker. Over 200+ people packed into the room and filled every available space to hear his talk. There had been a lot of buzz being generated leading up to the session about beavers, and so lots of folks came to see & hear!! We then had an impromptu casual lunch time discussion that was open to everyone and over 60+ folks came to that as well!! All across the board there is a feeling of a swelling moment to bring beavers to the forefront of restoration!!!

Wow, think about what that means. There are watershed organizations across California worried about the salmon population. If a third of those tireless advocates became beaver believers we would be sitting on a beaver-boom town!  There really could be beavers in Sonoma and Marin and Los Angelos. We really could see a day when a city or property owner has to pay a “salmon tax” to get a permit to exterminate beavers! My fondest dream is that it becomes more cost effective to live with beavers than to kill them, and the funds for that “tax” go to a public account from which cities and property owners can take out loans to help pay for the installation of flow devices and culvert blockers. Ahhh a girl can dream. You can bet Worth A Dam will be happy to play a part in the process.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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