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

Category: Friends of Martinez Beavers


Today 99 children’s tiles will become a permanent memorial to the beavers in Alhambra Creek. I cherish every single one of our young (and not-so-young young!) artists’ contributions along with the help of our generous donors that made this possible.  The Gazette asked me today if there would be some kind of ribbon cutting or ceremony, but I told them no, just an open invitation for people to come down and see them for themselves. Wednesday, with the measuring and taping, you could really see how the project is going to look. Art to draw attention to the creek and its famous residents, beavers to draw attention to the deserving artists. It’s a perfect combination.

I won’t get all misty-eyed about the miles we’ve travelled to get to this place, or the challenges and bitter sheetpile hardships we have endured. I won’t mention the kits that didn’t survive this year, or the long hours of worry as we watched for missing faces. I won’t talk about all the exaggerations, the lies, the accusations or the mean-spirited panic beaver supporters have faced. I’ll just think about a certain November evening 27 months ago when everything changed.

Thank you Martinez, for giving our beavers the best possible welcome and thank you beavers, for teaching a city how to listen.


Beaver City, USA from Ribbon Made Productions on Vimeo.

Richard Parks was the editor of the Martinez News Gazette who first published my beaver articles way back when. He is now a graduate student at the UCB school of Journalism. He chose to cover this story for some quirky reason. It appeared yesterday in the East Bay Express. The beaver/muskrat footage should be familiar. It’s mine.

The Martinez Beaver Dilemma Cute and cuddly or a flood threat? By Richard Parks In Martinez — the hometown of baseball hero Joe DiMaggio and naturalist John Muir — a family of beavers has made its home in a downtown creek. Some love them because they’re cute and snuggly; some hate them because they allegedly add to the flood threat in downtown.


The Crow Woods Beaver from Haddonfield Civic Association on Vimeo.

Our friend Sarah from Unexpected Wildlife Refuge, alerts me to this video from her friend Butch Brees about the Crow Woods beaver(s). Last month I read a lovely article about the local conservation commissions response to the new resident, and now it’s here on the little screen! Notice the fact that their citizen association spends money to actually film the story of these beavers and put footage on the website. (The city of Martinez won’t even provide a link or a photo.) Notice also they invested in lengthening the bridge when the beavers flooded it, instead of bemoaning damage to their trails and hiring the trapper. Bruce tours the area with a Haddonfield Conservation Commissioner and talks about the new habitat the beavers are creating for wildlife.

It’s almost made me teary to think of a video explaining the beaver value and habitat on the same website as video from the school board and city council. I can’t even really imagine it. One would think that Conservancy organizations are the obvious friends to beavers, but alas, it is rarely true. Sarah has clearly done admirable work spreading the beaver gospel in her neck of the woods. The BEST PART about this video is at the end, when Butch talks about how the park benefits from the raised water level because of the beavers, but if the beavers raise it too much they can install a flow device. Wow. A city that knows its options. Hand me my smelling salts, I’m feeling faint.

Speaking of Conservancy commissions, Massachusetts has about 300+ of them, one for every municipality. I have written several this year advocating a humane investment in beaver management. I just learned that Saturday Mike Callahan of Beaver Solutions will be giving a talk at the state wide conservancy conference.They are pairing him with “on-the-other-hand, why-not-try-killun” representative, Laura Hajduk to present all the options.

Devoted readers of this website will recognize her name from the New York Times article where she bemoaned the successful (but very partial–Ed. note) recovery of the beaver population in the state, blaming it on ‘them pesky environmentalists who outlawed body-crushing traps’, (even though any creative man, woman or child with two IQ points to rub together could still get permission to use those traps under almost any circumstances). There will be a kind of “dueling beavers” note to the conference as they argue management from both sides of the crick. (I’m proud to say that website wonders allow me to note that several people searching for Ms. Hajduk over the year have come to our website, which is just plain fun.)

 

Final Note: Jon watched the otter for an hour this morning, in fine display! If you haven’t seen him yet, you still have time!


Okay I’ve been biding my time to tell hard core beaver fans about the VERY EXCITING DEVELOPMENT this weekend in identifying the historic range of beavers in California. This is a rarefied topic I know, not of obvious interest to everyone, but it matters because beavers all over are routinely killed with the justification “well they’re not native anyway”.(See Kings Beach). A very important historic paper by Tappe has been quoted by every possible source saying that beavers weren’t native over 1000 feet. We want to verify whether this is true.

Imagine how excited I was to meet Barry Hill this weekend at the Flyway Festival. He’s a regional hydrologist for the USDA working out of Vallejo. One of his jobs is to verify the activity of historical beavers so that meadow restoration can be justified by the US forestry service. (Meadows are linked to the soil deposits of old beaver dams.)

So in his research he came across an archeologist who was doing some digging near Feather River, Northern California, 4500 feet elevation. He now works with the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Oregon. Well his excavations included an old beaver dam which he had the foresight to have carbon-dated. Are you sitting down?

It was 750 years old.

The archeologist was interested in writing a paper on this find, but wanted a co-author. I said I’d be happy to introduce him to several, and Barry wrote me monday that we can organize a conference call on this topic for March.

Flyway Festival > Birds > USDA > Soil > Archeology > Beaver Dams > Worth A Dam.

How’s that for connections!


Fans of the Martinez Beavers will understand more intimately than most that the survival of our beavers ultimately depended on just one thing. Sure public outcry made a difference, and fear of political ruin quivered the hearts of at least two on the council, but if the dam had stayed at its original height and continued to pose a flooding threat, they would have been soundly dispatched. (Sent in a pickup truck to Plumas county if the god’s were kind or off to a glue factory somewhere if they were not.)

What fundamentally allowed the beavers to remain with us was the flow device, installed by Skip Lisle and often mistakenly called a “beaver deceiver”. (It’s actually a “Castor Master”.) This allowed for the water height to be lowered in such a way that the movement is disguised from the beavers. They don’t feel the suction and don’t associate the outflow with their dam, so they tolerate the water loss. Skip invented the beaver deceiver during his work with the Penobscot Nation. He went on to develop his ideas for the flow device and round fence over time. Skip is committed to showing the world that flow devices work. He traveled to Lithuania this summer to talk at the conference there, and he is headed for Oregon next week to give a four hour teaching at the State of the Beaver Conference.

Mike Callahan of Beaver Solutions trained with Skip and eventually developed his own full time business around beaver management. His vision of the best use of management skills included a teaching DVD that would allow property owners, cities and transit workers to cheaply implement tools that could manage problematic beaver behavior. He is well aware that allowing this keystone species to remain takes care of so many others, but Mike is a pragmatic beaver defender who helps businesses focus on the bottom line. Installing a successful flow device, he argues, can manage the problem now and in the future. Hiring a trapper is a temporary solution that will get more expensive over time.

Mike was awarded a grant from the AWI last year to make the DVD, and has been working towards its release. Expect it in the Spring of 2010. Recently he approached me asking to pay to include three minutes of my beaver footage in the production. Since Mike’s smart website was the first place I turned with beaver questions LO these many moons ago, and we became friends over the ensuing years, I can’t think of anything more “full circle” than using that footage to help him and help beavers around the country for years to come.  Whatever financial agreement we figure out will go to Worth A Dam.

In the mean time, I am helping him spread the word about the upcoming project with an announcement postcard sent to beaver supporters and interested media. You might recognize my favorite photo from Bob Armstrong of the Mendenhall Glacier Beavers. (He gave his blessing on the prospect, and arranged for Mike to come do a beaver management plan in the state park there.) The idea is to follow up with a second announcement once the project is released. I’m hopeful that by helping more people learn that there are reasonable ways to manage beaver behavior, and inexpensive tools for learning about them,  we can significantly impact the well-being of beavers all around the country.

In the mean time, our wikipedia friend is supposed to be honing a “flow device” entry this weekend. It’s hard to remember so long ago, but in 2007 I definitely had to hunt to find out about options. Remember how many people talked about the Clemson Pond Leveler at the meeting? Someone from Lafayette even donated the funds for one. That was one tool that had been published and talked about, but the technology had already come a long way since then. Mike was the one who explained that to me. Let’s hope “flow device” becomes a household name – at least as common as “snare”.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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