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

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We’re hoping you can help by telling us how the website appears on your computer screen (and don’t say “stupid!”) Recently the words in the menu bar seemed to spontaneously change color for some Firefox users, but not for Explorer or Safari. Our web guru Jean assures me that the html code “says” to be white, but it is clearly more interested (on my screen anyway) in being an orange-y horrific-color-blindness-test hue. Could you let us know what you see by emailing and telling me what browser you use and what you see on your screen?  Look specifically on the menu bar, the one that says “Home | Our Story | Sightings etc.”  If you have access to two computers, (work and home) let us know on each.

Here’s a picture of how it should look: white letters on a burnt sienna menu bar…

And here’s a picture of how it started looking to me as of 1:00 pm yesterday.


Which do you see? or maybe you see something different altogether? Let us know. It’s easy to take a picture of your screen and send it. Press the “print screen” key on the upper right hand of your keyboard. Right click to “Paste” onto a processing program like Word, then copy. Then you can paste the photo your email. It would be a big help.


I heard the most amazing story yesterday on All Things Considered. A pair of unrelated 16 year old girls, whose fathers were deployed in Afghanistan, were planning to organize a conference for some 400 Military daughters, under the motto “Unite. Inspire. Lead.” They understood that their own experience of feeling isolated, burdened, insecure and “adultified” by the absence of their respective fathers was a common problem. There sadly isn’t much attention to or understanding of our military children, especially the children of reservists, who aren’t part of a military community and aren’t surrounded by other kids going through the same thing. With the current structure of the armed forces we have more of these kids than we ever did but they are scattered around the country and often do not know each other or have access to any support. Moranda Leah and Kaylei Deakin knew that more could be done, and they were willing to be the ones to do it.

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=-aiaRm-1Geo]

The National Guard helped them attend Maria Schriver’s conference to inspire young women to follow their dreams, and apparently that seed rooted deep. Now they have presented to Schriver’s staff, several brigadier generals, and have even booked the conference center. Their coverage on PRI yesterday was a huge accomplishment, and generated a ton of overnight interest.

The high school girls, who will start their senior year in the fall, have decided to do something that nobody has done before — not Pentagon officials, not governors, not mayors (at least, NPR can’t find a record of it). They are trying to organize the first major get-together for the children, specifically daughters, of troops who have gone to war.”We’d like to boost these girls and their self-esteem and their self-confidence,” Deakin tells the camera.”We are growing the sisterhood, with our mantra: unite, inspire, lead,” Hern adds. They call their conference “The Sisterhood of the Traveling BDUs” — a play on the title of a popular novel and Army speak for battle uniforms.

The entire ATC piece is so inspiring I urge you to listen to it in its entiretly. It will reassure you that this next generation, despite their IPOD’s and constant texting, can carry the burden of our nation towards a brighter and better future. It will inspire you that one person can make a difference and two people can make a movement. It will make you remember when you were in High School and dared to dream impractical things that couldn’t possibly happen.

And it will make you smile.


[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=g_sWmD6NvMY]

“The enemy of my enemy is my friend”… is said to be an old Arabian proverb. Wikipedia tells me there is a similar Chinese version which reads “It is good to strike the serpents head with your enemy’s hand”. All this to say that sometimes unusual allies find common ground, which is certainly not news to beaver supporters.

Case in point? When I went on my recent Safari West tour (which you and a loved one can bid on for your VERY OWN at the auction) I learned that the Rhino is actually doing much better in its struggle to avoid extinction because of a little medical wonder called “Viagra”. Apparently the odds of treating an erection problem are much better with modern medicine than with ground up rhino horn, which makes sense.

The past few days have seen alot of woodpecker traffic to the blog, and this morning Gary Bogue gave a huge nod in our direction. Woodgnawers and Woodpeckers are not such strange bedfellows: they are both fun to watch and can have some irritating habits. Apparently they can both also encourage alarmingly stupid thinking in the human species as well.

Our SFEP friend, Lisa Owens Viani, is starting a letter writing campaign about the woodpecker issue, and encourages you to write the hapless Public Affairs woman who was appointed to deal with this debacle.  Here’s mine. She says that APHIS hates bad publicity, so your voice is going to matter. Send your letters or emails to

Gail Keirn, Public Affairs Specialist, U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service, Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, 4101 LaPorte Avenue, Fort Collins, Colorado  80521-2154. Phone: 970.266.6007. Fax: 970.266.6010. gail.m.keirn@aphis.usda.gov

If you have a few moments leftover and live in the East Bay, she suggests you contact Barbara Lee’s office at (510) 763-0370 or if you’re out this way George Miller (925) 602-1880. Sometimes an advocacy organization gets so large and successful it forgets how to be furious. This issue has certainly shaken Audubon right down to the angry grass roots. Civic cooperation can function as a kind of sleeping pill. I even saw it on a very small scale with the beavers. When the city was dressed up in its cooperative clothes it was so hard to know when to push and when just be grateful for the crumbs. Facing truly outrageous decisions like USDA has helped Rossmoor implement makes things simpler.


So my parents tell me that they were having lunch in Calistoga and my father was wearing last years Worth A Dam t-shirt when a woman stopped him and said, “Hey, I have one just like that!” They chatted for a while and my dad reminded her not to miss the festival this year (although he couldn’t remember the date). “Never mind,” she assured him. “I’ll look it up on the website”.  Unable to resist the parent impulse he explained he was “Heidi’s father” and the woman nodded politely and asked, “Who’s Heidi?”

Ahhhh this is a lovely and affirming story on so many levels. It shows how beaver people can recognize each other, even in far away places. It shows how the website exists in the minds of people who might not regularly check it, but know it’s there if they ever have a question. Best of all it shows how the beavers’ safety does not rest on the shoulders of a single person or even a single organization, but rather on the backs of the many who carry their story with them. 

zeitgeist

Etymology:
German, from Zeit + Geist spirit

def: The general intellectual, moral, and cultural climate of an era

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