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

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Saying it has been a public relations nightmare, the Pinnacle Ridge (Mutual 59) board voted to stop the shooting of woodpeckers for two months.

What? Bad dreams at Rossmoor? Disrupting the rest of the most deserving? I realize this is the best news that we pesky “think of solutions other than killing” types can hope for. Give them enough spotlights that it gets very difficult to be stupid under the glare of them. Hmm.

Pinnacle Ridge puts off shooting woodpeckers for two months

By Cathy Tallyn Staff writer

The two months will give the Audubon Society time to implement its suggestions on how to keep the pesky birds from pecking at the Styrofoam on buildings in the Mutual. It will be a temporary fix until the Mutual replaces the Styrofoam, said Mutual President Walt Foskett at the board’s meeting last Tuesday.

It could take the Mutual as long as five years to remove the tempting Styrofoam (at last they admit it) because that’s when scaffolding will be erected to paint the three-story buildings, said Bill Friesen, building maintenance manager.

It’s very expensive to put up scaffolding, he said. It would also be expensive to put a man on a 40-foot ladder to do the job.

(You hear that? Its hard work to put up scaffolding, it’s much easier to pull a trigger. We are innocent victims of Audubondage!)

The woodpecker problem also affects buildings in Eagle Ridge (Mutual 68). The two Mutuals have spent seven years and $170,000 trying to solve the problem of the woodpeckers pecking into the synthetic stucco homes as well as on the wood trim.

Representatives of the Audubon Society met with Mutual 59 officials recently to discuss possible solutions that don’t involve shooting the woodpeckers.

Among other things, the nature group suggested putting in artificial granaries to attract the birds away from the buildings as well as putting nets on the buildings to stop the birds from nesting. It also said it would work to get grants of up to $500,000 to pay for the mitigation measures.

“They’re saying, ‘Stop (the shooting) and we’ll help,’” said Mutual Operations Director Paul Donner. He suggested the two-month break.

Foskett said, “We’re throwing the ball back to them.” If the Audubon Society doesn’t do anything, the board will re-evaluate its position on shooting the woodpeckers, he said.

The vote to temporarily put the permit in abeyance was 4 to 1 with Shirley Magarian casting the dissenting vote. (shirley my friend, we need to talk)

The Mutual has three months left on its depredation permit from the U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife, which allows up to 25 woodpeckers to be shot by a marksman from the Department of Agriculture.

It’s doubtful that Fish and Wildlife will issue another permit when this one expires, said Donner. “I don’t think you’ll get a permit next year because of all the negative publicity.” (Ohhh those pesky wildlife publicity hounds. If only people didn’t watch what we did we could do it easier!)

Foskett said no matter what the board does, it will generate bad publicity. “The press is not going to be kind to us,” he said. (Really? You don’t think a clever ad exec could turn this press momentum into a massive Rossmoor media coup? Rossmoor: Because we listen. Rossmore: Its in your Nature. Rossmoor: Where creative mind solve life’s toughest problems.)

Rossmoor’s shooting of the woodpeckers has become a national story, said Mutual 59 board Director Sara Cornell.(hahahahaha)

Fellow board member Jo Fasciona noted there have been a number of negative letters to the editor about the bird problem. “We’re going to get a lot of flack,” she said. (You could also get alot of praise and goodwill, Jo. Remember.)

Well that has made my little animal rights day. We’ll visit this again I’m sure! For now pat your fellow birdbrains on the back. Well done!


Regular visitors of this hapless webpage may have noticed a strange series of changes in appearance yesterday, none of them improving. Unfortunately our wiz of a web designer has moved on to greener pastures and left the child to do the man’s job. I admit, like all children, I looked at the shiny red button and thought, “I wonder what would happen if I press this”…

Famous last words.

Allow me to be the first to teach you this life lesson, if you haven’t already learned it: nothing good ever happens when you touch the shiny red button. No marching bands arrive, and no ballerinas in gauzy display come to adorn you. Instead what happens is that you turn your beautifully designed web page into a webpage that looks exactly like everyone else’s, and half your information becomes inaccessible.

I spent most of yesterday on the phone with our host server to see if the untainted page could be restored. I was assured that with a little patience the site could look like it did on January 10th. Imagine my delight! Just 5 days ago! I was as hopeful as a young bride, dreaming of the big event. Except it was restored to January 10th 2008.  See those pesky drop down menus? (well if you’re using ie you don’t even see those, sigh) They were an experimental phase that we abandoned…sigh…oh where is my lovely bar across the top…

We here at worth a dam have no shame. We will beg, plead, cajole, flatter, and entice to get the things that we need to take care of our beavers. After sweet talking my Utah tech support into nearly two hours of support and wooing him with promises of glowing letters to his supervisor (which I honored), I heard a rumor that a beaver regular is actually an IT guy! I swooped in my batman cape to implore his help. He very kindly picked up my handkerchief and if all goes well he might help us fix things again.

In the mean time, welcome back. We missed you.


With the weirdly warm temperatures we had yesterday its worth thinking about how different our beavers lives are from those on the North East Coast.  In Vermont, for example, where beaver expert Skip Lisle lives, the winter freeze has kept his beavers in the lodge for some time now. They live entirely on the food they have stored over the rest of the season. He recently wrote:

My beavers are under a foot of ice right now, getting cabin fever, and getting thin. It’s just a metabolic race against time—whoever lasts longer, the beavers or the winter, wins.

If a beaver who lives part of the year under ice, spends part of the year not feeding, building up reserves and using them up has got to be part of the beaver grand design. In our more comfortable climate we shouldn’t be surprised if our beavers get a little “rounder”, since they feed all year and do not fast.

Imagine the intricate family bonding that goes on between eight beavers holed up in an area the size of a hottub, trapped under ice for three months out of the year. That’s like a cross country drive stuck in the back seat with your brothers playing I spy or punch buggy from New York to San Francisco that lasts a season.

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=Plzafk41Bg4&eurl]


Last night’s uninterrupted viewing saw three kits and two yearlings. The beavers looked to be going about their business, mutually grooming, mewling. Apparently (for the kits at least) their business involves chewing a little on one of our saplings at the dam. This lead to a rather unexpected close encounter, captured in this photograph. The hay is from the abandon bail that lay in the water for weeks and was recently pulled out and sprinkled about by Moses.

(I think he might have been asking about the webpage.)

If fate should ever give you a beaver close encounter, don’t pet or panic. Remember that beavers have poor eye sight and depending on the wind may not even know you’re there. Just give a little clap of your hands and they’ll hear the sound and move along.

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=zeodh6zypcA]

Shortened presentation video from the First Night minus narration for anyone that missed it. Check out the Moses’ footage of mom putting mud on the lodge. To hear the rundown in person, come to our next in showing, which I think will be at the Delta chapter of the Sierra Club in March. I’ll let you know details when it approaches.


We went to the Sierras this weekend to remember what snow (and my parents) looked like. On the way there we pass through the town of Sutter Creek and a low bridge over rushing waters, that this summer were looking awfully still. You could tell there was a dam downstream, but it was private land and we’ve had more than a few run ins with one-eyed crabby old men carrying shotguns on that creek so we were hesitant to go look.

I looked all over for news of these beavers. Nothing in the local papers or gossiped at church. This fall the water was passing freely again and we thought the beavers had been quietly killed, like most beavers are.

But yesterday’s trip over the creek spied not one but TWO visible dams, and a pair of heavy still beaver pond. The Sutter Creek Beavers are alive and well, and digging up that goldust to pack their homes and lodges.

Just thought you’d want to know.

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