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

Category: Video


In the 5 years I’ve been slinging this beaver story I have learned some very mysterious things about the way the media works. I was surprised to find, for instance, that nothing makes a news story more attractive than the fact that someone else has already reported on it. This seems counter-intuitive, but getting noticed by one outlet means that others will soon rush to your door step. You would think that the need to make a unique. creative, investigative stamp would drive journalists in separate directions, but no. Their herd instinct is very powerful, and when it rains it pours.

Likewise I have learned that beaver stories bring out vagina puns from every vagina-access-challenged male who fondly misses their middleschool days. Yesterday on the Huffington post I was politely informed that “This Dad was expecting a little ‘beaver’ of his own for father’s day’ and there were several hundred tweets enjoying the comment “Every Dad should learn from this beaver!”. Par for the course.

There are of course a sprinkling of  ‘animals are beautiful’ comments from the fairer sex, and a third sinister strain from men who want to appear more grizzled and stoic- (I suspect especially if they actually are neither). Their comments invariably involve one of the three key words: trapping, hats or rodents. This is a complex triad in which point C or B are used to justify syllogism A. Well, I guess if they’re sitting around commenting on the computer they aren’t out actually trapping beavers so that’s a plus.

If you meander through the comments on the Huffingtonpost, for example, you will easily be able to classify these three response styles. There were fewer viciously cruel remarks than usual, and with the exception of the man that demanded how I knew it was a male beaver because I had never seen his penis and the man who called the soundtrack ‘cheesey’ I consider myself fairly unscathed.

The first time I filmed a beaver it was dad, and I happened to be with MY dad on the Escobar bridge. I was so exited I wanted everyone to see what I saw and came home that day and tried to learn to make a movie. It was very, very, very difficult and it was a few months before I had the patience to learn how to put my first together. My second movie was a general explanation of the Martinez beavers. It has so many jarring mistakes in it that I cringe to see it now, including a photo of a nutria. Despite its crude editing and immaturity it had by far my biggest number of views at 8,646, and that makes it unique. Until now anyway, but we’ll get to that.

If you’ve never tried to make a movie yourself, I will tell you that editing and arranging footage on an unfamliar system takes every bit of concentration you possibly have. It is like weaving a loom with a firetruck underwater. Even when the systems got more familiar it is still pretty consuming. I started out trying to edit movies with my new mac, but it was so confusing I eventually gave up and used the PC for the first few tries. The more I learned the more engrossed I got. I remember I would sit and edit  and be so surprised that I had get up and use the restroom again! It seemed like only minutes had passed. Of course when I looked at the clock I would realize it had been several hours. All I wanted was to be faster. I had a full time job, phone calls to return, meetings to attend, and a website to update. Did one ever get faster at making movies? I asked filmmaker Don Bernier one day this very question. He just smiled.

Of course, I found out that being faster means being more ambitious. When  I got more adept with moviemaker, I wanted to learn something more advanced. I bit the bullet and shelled out $$ for final cut and found a tutor on Craig’s list to teach me how to use it. I’m not kidding. He was about 19 and the encounter left me weirdly demoralized and strangely exhilarated if such a combination is possible. We went through a single lesson and I was able to squeak by enough to limp along and use a keyframe or two. The Beaver Christmas movie was the first time I used FC. (I have since learned that  every little thing you ever wanted to learn to do on FC is explained in an easy-to-understand video on Youtube. Which, if you can get over the fact that the instructors still have algebra homework and gym class, is pretty awesome.)

All of which I offer as back story to the movie about father beaver, of which I happened to have been fairly proud. Dad was much more private than mom, cautious and wary. I never grew as fond of him, nor he (I suspect) of me. But when Mom died I knew he really, really mattered and making the movie helped me see him in a new light. In a way it was the perfect vehicle for the transition from mom’s death to life without her. I made it with final cut and with the exception of one or two jiggy transitions I couldn’t fix, I am fairly proud of it.

This is good. Because last night at 7 pm it had about 18.000 hits – 10,000 more than my most watched video ever. I was still trying to think what that felt like when the phone rang and it was the UK Daily Mail asking me about the story and permission to quote and print. Why does the Daily Mail in the UK have my home phone number, you ask? Another explanation I learned about the media, which is that everyone is owned by everyone else. Turns out they are the broadest circulated paper in the UK and owned by another group related to someone  I did indeed send a press release about mom’s death two years ago. It’s all in the family!

Today they have a full page story of the exciting travails of the Martinez Beavers, including mom’s death, the orphan’s adventures and the role of Dad as single parent. Go read the whole thing. The British are sentimental about wildlife, and since they’ve been scared of reintroducing beavers, this can’t hurt. There are tons of Cheryl’s beautiful photos without her beautiful name, and I’m very sorry for that. At least they say Worth A Dam and there’s a link to our site, which I’m happy for.

And more importantly, as of this morning 36,392 people have watched Dad’s movie.

I’m trying to take it in stride. I spent yesterday writing a formal request to Allied Waste for the donated trash receptacles for the beaver festival. Today I’ll update the promotional film and see if I can get it run on the local channel again. But I might just peak at the number again in a few hours and see what it says.

I’d love Dad to crest 50,000.

“And it should be, it should be, it SHOULD be like that!
Because Horton was faithful! He sat and he sat!
He meant what he said
And he said what he meant…
And they sent him home
Happy,
One Hundred per cent!

How the British Beaver is back in business

The Escot Estate has been at the forefront in reintroducing beavers to Britain

Along with boar, otters and water voles, beavers and red squirrels are being brought back to Britain in places like the beautiful Escot Estate in West Devon.

Over the past 35 years, conservationists have started to reintroduce the species. Today, there are believed to be at least half a million of the fat, furry herbivores (they don’t eat fish) swimming about all over Europe.

Apart from Britain, that is. We’ve been a bit slow to catch on. But, finally, in 2009 three beaver families were released in Argyll and there have been small projects in England, too. Just last month a young male was discovered living in a slurry pit in Cornwall, suggesting that beavers could well be breeding in the wild.

Escot led the way in this revival. They acquired a pair of Bavarian beavers in 2006, after John-Michael saw them in Poland and fell in love with the species. The pair bonded and in 2008 produced some of the first kits seen in the UK in 400 years.

Ohh, I just love reading an article in the Telegraph where people admit they fell in love with beavers! Seems Johm-Michael Epcot has been working hard to teach locals and tourists about the benefit of bringing beavers back to the landscape. He already has a sympathetic ear in the media: the article reads like a eulogy.

Beavers might be thriving at Escot, but their fate throughout Britain is still far from certain. While conservationists lobby for the reintroduction all over the UK, many landowners object to their impact on the habitat.

“What people don’t understand is that they’re actually helping the environment,” says John-Michael. “Yes they can change the landscape. But by creating small tributaries and still pools of water, they help encourage insects. Which, in turn, attracts bird life.  “They can help people, too. At Escot we had a disused Victorian brick bathing pool, which I spent most of my childhood trying to repair. Within weeks of the beavers’ arrival, they’d filled it up. And they keep the trees nice and neat. If there are any we don’t want nibbled, we just pop some chicken wire around the base of the trunk.”

Nicely done – (although I would only recommend chicken wire if your beavers happened to be the same size as chickens.) Still, it effectively communicates that there are ways to protect what you want without killing beavers. Apparently the breeding female was killed last year when the tree she was chewing fell on her. Her two kits eventually died as well. In a manner I can only describe as obliquely British Mr. Epcot describes her as beloved, fondly missed, and DELICIOUS!

Yes, they ate her.

Go read the article for yourself, it makes sense in a respecting-nature living-off-the-land kinda way. Anyway he is obviously a friend, and just a nudge away from starting beaver festival UK. There are sure a lot of ‘private beavers’ in Devon. I’d be very surprised if they didn’t take reintroduction matters into their own hands — er — paws eventually!

Last night at the dam we were entertained by a very enthusiastic juvenile western grebe who fished like he was chasing greased pigs through a commuter train platform, and dove like the water surface was so hard that penetrating it required a running start. Here, let me show you a little of what I mean.

There was a cluster of old friends, beaver defenders and Worth A Dam regulars on the bridge, and we were all rewarded with lots of this:

Really, in the few weeks we have left before solstice starts to rob our very log days, you should come down and see Alhambra Creek’s version of waterworld for yourself.


Last night on the footbridge we were treated to a beaver show with a cast of at least three characters. It all started with a visitor from the ‘new’ bank hole under the cottonwood tree. He sauntered around picking choice willow and brought the branches back to eat or share. Then a second beaver emerged, who (not to be outdone in offerings) took a lovely choice branch OFF the dam and brought it back to the second lodge. Before a third beaver came from upstream and crossed over the secondary before making his ambling way downstream.

It has been a long time since we saw three beavers at once! While this one was coming down another was eating a strawberry under the bridge!

Because our beavers have excellent timing, a family of three generations just happened to be together walking on their evening stroll. Grandma, Grandpa, Mom and Dad, and a charming little girl watched in awe. When I described what was happening and invited them to the beaver festival they said they had been last year and had a wonderful time! Were beavers nocturnal? Could beavers hold their breath? Did they ever eat fish? After watching one beaver mud the dam the child soberly announced that she wanted to BE a beaver, and clarified to mom that this aspiration exceeded even her decision to be a fairy.

I of course understood exactly what she meant.

All in all, it was excellent beaver viewing. Warm and  with primarily benign homeless sightings. The most threatening was a thuggy youth who left his other thuggy friends to come stand with us on the bridge and ask questions. Did that pipe they put through the other dam work? Will we need another one? Is their a nest somewhere? He was particularly surprised to see a tail slap because he had never witnessed one before. After the excitement he wasn’t so thuggy, and he and his friends didn’t bother anyone. Before the solstice steals our evening sun away, I would definitely advise making the trip to watch for yourself.


Mario Alfaro-June 5 to June 20
Reception June 8th, 6-9pm
mARTinez Gallery
630 Court Street
Martinez, CA

Whatcha doing tonight? Movie? Date night? Graduation party? Whatever it is, see if you can chisel out some time to stop by the mARTinez Gallery and shake the hand of the man who boldly painted this

And then this….

And then THIS

Just in case you’re new to this story, Mario painted the mural on Main St, and folks would stop by and ask ‘where was the beaver?’ so he added one, based on Cheryl’s photo from this website. Then the big subterranean civic muscle flexed and Mario was ordered to paint over the mural. He was very upset and also painted over his name. Director of Public works Dave Scola was good enough to speak  to the media, but he obviously was just the mouthpiece for those much more powerful – (I imagine someone who owns a block of sheetpile that reaches higher than anywhere in the city). (Maybe someone with a particular resentment for all things castor.) After the chronicle ran with the story  the city realized they better smooth things over with the artist, and Mario eventually signed his name again: this time with a very small beaver tail attached to the “O”.

Mario ‘s work will be on display for the month of June, and no one should miss this opportunity to buy this man a beer and thank him for trying to listen to the will of the people and putting Martinez in the news in Florida, Milwakee and Chicago. And by the way if you never listened to this, you really, really should. Come to think of it, even if you did listen to it you should probably do so again, because everyone deserves to laugh this hard.

Sadly, I can’t be there tonight, but go for me, okay? Tell Mario that Beaver people thank him for his effort and remember what a difference he made.Tell him we smile every time we walk past the main street bridge because we know that beaver is hidden under there.

This morning’s image surprised me. When I got it home and on the big screen I realized this beaver is Dad. Look at his very bumpy head, and different colorations. He was going back and forth across the creek up from the footbridge, emerging and returning to what we believe is a new bankhole under the cottonwood tree there. Reed still seems to be in the hole right by the footbridge, but I’ve never seen Dad down this far before. Hmm…


I can’t exactly decide on the title for this post. I’m torn between the “Agony and the Ecstasy” ,”The Sacred and the Profane”, “Mary to merry” or maybe even from “‘kits’ to ‘kitch”, but to paraphrase Donald, you go to press with the title you have, not the title you wish you had. Let’s start with the lovely upcoming beaver festival in Utah which recently added this to their webpage.

Can you read that? The part where it says they got the idea from a GRAND DAY in MARTINEZ and the good people at WORTH A DAM??? Isn’t that a warm, cozy, accomplished feeling? Well, actually when I first saw it on Monday it produced more of a cold, prickly, stiffening feeling since it said the good people at GIVE a dam. (Horrors!) After the convulsing stopped and I could feel my fingers enough again to dial I called Mary right away and begged her to please, please change it. I decided not to mention that it was actually August and not July: priorities. Everything is much, much nicer now, and I’m so happy our influence is memorialized.

Mary O’brien Utah Forests Program Director of the grand canyon trust checking out out tiles.

This morning I was greeted with the most-adamant-ever tail slap. It was delivered with such drama that it even had springback action over the head! Here’s the inadequate video with slow motion  so you can see for yourself how much s/he wasn’t kidding.

Now onto the more jaw-dropping  part of the morning. Imagine my surprise when I read this:

Animated beavers busy educating children

BEIJING – While “Tom and Jerry” and Mickey Mouse still reign supreme in kids’ entertainment in China, a band of highbrow beavers have arrived on the scene to help fill a void in early-childhood education.

As Chinese children’s new online friends, the beavers from Beva.com sing, tell stories and encourage kids build good habits. As a hit among young parents and their children, the site has over 3 million registered members since its launch in 2010.

Its popular children’s songs and original Flash cartoons have an average of 10 million online views every month.

Beva.com

That’s right. Hello Kitty-like beavers are busy teaching Chinese toddlers to brush their teeth, respect authority and play fair. Apparently since 2009 it has steadily grown to be the ‘can’t miss’ cartoon for millions of children. It was designed by one of the youngest CEO’s in the country, who quit his IT career to start launch this idea instead.

“Children need a partner to understand society and obtain knowledge and skills. The beavers meet their emotional needs, and that’s why they’re so popular among children,” said Yang Wei, co-founder and CEO of Beva.com.

In just two years, Yang has expanded his business beyond the Internet and into the development of mobile applications, books and educational toys for children and parents.  “As the kids love the beaver, they take his ‘advice’ very seriously,” Yang Wei said.

Castor Kinder-Care! To be fair, the animation is no worse than ‘My little pony’, the songs no more insipid than Barney and the whimsy no more plastic than ‘Teletubbies’ – but even I don’t believe I will be watching Beva any time soon. Still I would be remiss not to assure all young fans and their parents that they are of course welcome to join us for the Beva – festiva August 4th.

And because this site is perhaps the only one with the word Beva in it that will escape a particularly scouring kind of  attention…


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