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

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Remember the beavers in Owens Valley? The LA Department of Water and Power decided that they posed a threat to their intricate canal system and needed killing. They announced a new trapper contract for March and were looking for just the right price to do the job. This barbarism caught the attention of a local animal defender who has been in contact with us, the Sierra Club, the SPCA and the Humane Society. She got a hold of a court document that casually mentioned using helicopters to remove beaver dams and was understandably curious. Fool that I was, I assured her that it probably meant using helicopters to fly someone into the back country and pick out the dam with a clam rake. Oh no gentle readers. She received this yesterday:

To clarify, the Department’s use of helicopters is limited to times when wets conditions do not permit vehicle and equipment access or the when use of equipment might result in undesired riparian damage. Typically a helicopter mounted with a cable and grab hook removes the dams and on occasion crews are flown in to remove the dams by hand. However, the Department does not attempt actual beaver control via helicopters.

Turn off those extra lights and dripping faucets Los Angeles! You ratepayers are covering tens of thousands of dollars for LADWP to hover over water surfaces in the hills, backing up and forth until the dams been hooked and then a few more sweeps to break up the debris. Then the whole process again  a little downstream. Then the entire thing again next week when the beavers rebuild. That means the fuel, the pilot salary, and payment for the ‘hooker'(s)’.

The letter goes on to describe how beaver must be killed because they aren’t native to Owens Valley and are destroying the riparian habitat and making mosquitoes. Where to begin? Our historian friend points me to these references:

Beaver were re-introduced to the Owens Valley by the California Department of Fish and Game in 1948 in Baker Creek,[31] and have since spread throughout the Owens Valley.[32] Although it is controversial whether beaver were once native to the Owens Valley, there is growing evidence that they were native to the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada. In particular, the northern Paiute of Walker Lake, Honey Lake and Pyramid Lake have a word for beaver su-i’-tu-ti-kut’-teh.[33] When Stephen Powers visited the northern Paiute to collect Indian materials for the Smithsonian Institution in preparation for the Centennial Exhibition of 1876, he reported that the northern Paiute wrapped their hair in strips of beaver fur, made medicine from parts of beaver and that their creation legend included beaver. In addition, fur trapper Stephen Hall Meek “set his traps on the Truckee River in 1833”, which strongly suggests that he saw beaver or beaver sign.[34] Supporting this line of evidence, Tappe records in 1941 an eyewitness who said beaver were plentiful on the upper part of the Carson River and its tributaries in Alpine County until 1892 when they fell victim to heavy trapping.[35]

The letter doesn’t miss a single piece of BBM (blatant beaver misrepresentation), stopping to mention that beavers kill fish by raising water temperatures and lowering dissolved oxygen levels. All of which was painstakingly proven to be false by Dr. Pollock’s research on the effect of dams on groundwater temperatures. Never mind, it seems true to many, and that’s better than actual facts when it comes to making excuses for killing beavers.

LADWP has no prejudice towards beaver eradication, however, since the historical Owens Valley has no beaver population, inclusion of this species must be managed. This is why the state’s wildlife agency, CDFG, provides ultimate determinations on necessary beaver control and acceptable methods for our contractors to abide by. As a follow-up to my note last Friday, I was told today that we expect the trapping spec to be advertised again within a month.

And so it goes. LADWP has NO PREJUDICE towards  those godless fish-killing, mosquito-bringing, tree-destroying, non-native beavers. They are just MANAGING them. They deserve a host of letters but allow me to say in closing, Northern California didn’t send Southern California all that water for you to kill beavers in.


Get it? Apparently their sports writer thought it was such a fine pun combining his love for Shakespeare and his outdoorsy appreciation for slaughter (come to think of it maybe just the slaughter part) that he chose it for the headline of this column listing the best prices received at a recent fur auction  at the Genesee Valley Trappers Association in the clubhouse at Honeoye.

One beaver hide sold for $50.50, the highest for that species. Chris “Hoot” Gerling of Collins Center is a versatile trapper as well as a buyer. He specializes in making beaver hats.

Fifty bucks? Is that a lot? Just imagine how much it was worth to the beaver.   The casual tone of the scalping article and the notion that trapping is a SPORT and should be reported in this  section is chilling to me. Just for clarity, trapping would only be a sport if the animals had an equal chance of winning. Hmm. Now that would introduce an exciting element of risk to the story. I might follow that.

I had to go searching for the meaning behind the phrase. As famous as the soothsayer’s  ‘beware the ides of march‘ is,  the Roman term “ides”  is really just  referring to a date, probably the 15th, although there isn’t an exact translation. Unlike our dates, which are numbered sequentially from the beginning of the month, the Romans counted backwards from three fixed points: the Nones, the Ides and the Kalends of the following month. Kalends being the first day of the new moon, Ides being full moon  and nones being the half  moon.

So what would that make today? Well yesterday was the new moon, so that would make it the Kalends of March? I guess now we’re officially in Aprilis territory. Come to think of it, if you’re a beaver or a fur-bearer of any kind, you should  probably beware that, too.




11 month old kit - Cheryl Reynolds

And so was this kit. Cheryl snapped these this morning on her way to work. Same procedure, returning to the hole under the willow by the footbridge carrying something to snack on. No work being done that we could see this morning, but we are hopeful dad will start a project and the irresistible allure of work will draw the scattered siblings to help. A reporter from the record came down today and will do a story next week. She was especially interested in the idea of the lost wetlands habitat with the dam washout. When beavers go, the neighborhood goes with them!

Now that we have our Martinez Beaver fix out of the way, there’s work to be done. Bat signal in Connecticut! Apparently there’s a community castor consternation at work. The local and inscrutably named conservation commission has weighed in and now all that’s left is the killing. Watch this report:



Rumor has it a resident contacted Mike Callahan of Beaver Solutions to try and pressure the city to use humane tools. I wrote the relevant players last night and rooted around the internet to find this reasoned discussion about extermination in the conservation commission notes. My favorite part is where they all decide they need to kill the animals fast so the trapper gets the best price for the pelt. Thoughtful group.

Viney Hill Brook Park

Goody LeLash left a message for Joe Budrow, Essex ZEO regarding the beaver remediation at Old Quarry Pond, Viney Hill Brook Park. Ms. LeLash has not yet heard back from Mr. Budrow however Ms. LeLash has contacted a few licensed beaver trappers. The trappers can offer various ways to control the beavers. The cost to remove the beavers is $1,000 or more. Ms. LeLash was informed that there are very few locations left remaining within the state to which the beavers can be transferred. Michael Salafia, licensed trapper will remove the beavers at no cost providing he does so prior to the end of March 2011. Ms. LeLash indicated that she has not had an opportunity to speak with the Department of Environmental Protection.

Maryann Pleva referenced a DEP print-out on the management of the beavers. In this literature, the DEP notes that transplanting the beavers to another location is not a viable option. The DEP recommends that the beavers be destroyed. The beavers prefer to live in an area populated with people and a water source. The benefit of allowing the beavers to remain is that they provide a habitat for a wide variety of animals and insects, noting that dead standing trees killed by floods are home to blue heron.

Ms. LeLash indicated that Essex is home to an urban preserve and that this is the first time that a beaver population has been experienced in this park.

Doug Demarest stated that the best thing to do would be to trap the beavers and get rid of them.

Maryann Pleva questioned that if they are trapped and taken away, will other beavers find their way to this location.

Mr. Demarest stated that if they come back, they will be trapped again.

Ms. Tucker noted that before the beavers are trapped, approval should be obtained from Joe Budrow, Essex Wetlands Enforcement Officer.

It was the consensus of the Commission members that extermination is the only viable option for eradicating the beavers.

Ms. LeLash will email Mr. Budrow to seek approval to eradicate the beavers at Viney Hill Brook Park.

It was noted that the time constraint involves beaver pelts which are rich and ready to go now.

Mr. Helmecki suggested that the first Selectman should also be informed.

Motion made by Rich Helmecki to authorize Michael Salafia, licensed trapper to catch and remove at no fee, all of the beavers at Old Quarry Pond in Viney Hill Brook Park, with the approval of Joe Budrow, the Essex Wetlands Enforcement Officer. The First Selectman’s office will also be informed of the proposed activity.

Discussion

Ms. LeLash will call and email Mr. Budrow to discuss this activity and seek the approval from the Wetlands Enforcement Agent. Ms. LeLash will request that Mr. Budrow confirm his approval in writing. Mr. Budrow will advise the Conservation Commission if any other persons should be notified of this activity. The Trapper will be required to provide a copy of his trapping license and insurance. Ms. LeLash will inquire if the traps are all situated in the water. Ms. LeLash will contact the Town’s attorney to discuss the liability of this project.

Well, looks like Essex will be this week’s winner of the ‘whose killing beavers now’ award. Since this decision was made a month ago and the press is just covering it now I’m not hopeful for the fate of these beavers, but maybe the experience will squeeze some information through the constricted conduit of learning for the town in general. I was especially struck by this part of the article

News 8 went to First Selectman Phil Miller’s office seeking his perspective on the situation. He wasn’t there, but later returned one of News 8’s emails saying, “I’m. sorry that someone has turned you on to a non-event of sorts, just with the hopes that it might make me and the town look bad.”

Killing a family is a non-event in Connecticut and the media was only called in to make Essex look bad.  If you’d like to send your thoughts about this unimportant effort to make Essex look bad (and believe me, Phil, we couldn’t do it without you) you can write Mr. Miller here.


This morning we waited and waited for beavers. Cheryl had to leave at 7:30 and I promised myself I’d stay until 7:45. As I  despaired at the lost water and broken dams I thought maybe our beavers were holed up farther down stream. I had almost decided to leave, when I saw a telltale stick coming upstream.

Ahh what a beautiful sight! I got especially excited when I saw she/he would have to cross over the stump of dam to get back to the hole they appear to be using. As they came closer I filmed this:

So yesterday I chased down all the beaver experts I know to ask about Monday’s footage of bringing the tree home. I knew beavers in frozen areas store branches underwater to use as food later. But do they ever store branches as building material? No idea says half of the beaver world and probably not says the other half. To be fair, there are ZERO temperate zone beaver experts, so we may need to create some. I was told ‘why wouldn’t branches be washed away in the storm?’ which is logical, but wouldn’t that happen for a food cache too? And ‘how could beavers plan ahead that far?’ which is a good question in theory but aren’t food cache’s a kind of planning ahead? Anyway, my mind isn’t made up, but I’ll keep watching and thinking.

Oh and my work ethic hasn’t been bad, either.

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