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

Category: Why We Care


Worth a Dam and many beaver friends were on hand today for the 2 hour hearing on the matter regarding a Temporary Restraining Order for the so called Emergency bank stabilization work done on the creek. There were two attorneys for the city, and Michael Graf representing Worth A Dam. The city argued a couple procedural loopholes that were largely deemed unimportant by the judge, and was at its most skillful when city arguing that the entire city was at risk and there were more important things than beavers at stake. The issue of “their expert versus our expert” was raised, along with the argument that since our expert didn’t present testimony before the decision was made her findings are now inadmissable. Hmm.

If only we had the foresight to have challenged the decision before it was made.

The judge did not decide the case but said she would issue a ruling this afternoon around 3. I will make sure you know when we do. In the mean time city staff is down at the dam making preparations for their inevitable emergency. Worth A Dam did good today, and I was enormously proud of our support, of our media presence, two news cameras filming at the court house, and three print reporters. I was enormously proud of the judge interupting the city attorney who argued “beavers aren’t endangered” by saying, “That’s not the issue. The beavers are important to Martinez. That’s just a fact.”

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=24eL0cWwFxc]


Ever feel like you’re trapped in a 1970’s production of Charlotte’s web? Think about it: we’re all Fern. Here something we care about is threatened by the status quo – the way it’s always done, “don’t be sentimental – this is just the way it is”. We know that something we care about is worth fighting for. We keep working to show the city that our beavers are terrific, unique, worth viewing. We decide to use our untested talents in completely new ways to take care of what we love. We send our research team out to find new and interesting beaver facts that we can weave into our “web”. People come from all over to appreciate the beavers. They bring their children and grandparents. They tell their friends. We beam like Wilbur with the hope that maybe now, things will be different.

And the city just wants its bacon.


There must be a reason that they use the same name for “beaver families” and for “newly-forming democratic enclaves combining a sense of individual agency and collective responsibility”.

Ever since that dramatic November meeting I’ve been particularly interested in the role our beaver family has played in involving Martinez residents more actively in local politics. How many of us had even attended a city council meeting, (let alone spoke up at one), before that night? Turns out I’m not the only one intrigued.

Last week at the Farmer’s Market I met Dr. Trevor Stack, Anthropologist and Professor of Hispanic Studies at Aberdeen University in Scotland. Interested in the how different communities come to understand their role as citizens, he is doing a summer project on how Martinez residents view citizenship. We struck up a conversation about the beavers and their success at getting ordinary people to gather and disseminate facts, campaign and persuade their neighbors, learn more about their natural surroundings, and challenge their leaders into new ways of thinking.

Let’s call it “beaver democracy 101”

Dr. Stack met me at the dam this week to talk about the process of awakening that happened for the town, as residents became more and more aware of the challenges and solutions. We talked about how it was initially an organic movement, with no web page or non-profit to focus it. One of the things that struck me at that meeting was how it elegantly it represented a cross-section of Martinez; the cynical folk who no longer believe the city represents their interests, and the more trusting ones who expected them to do the right thing. It is probably fair to say that a third of the people there that night felt certain that their speaking up would make no difference at all, and a third were sure the city would try and listen.

In a way, we were both wrong.

Forming a subcommitee to study the issues, (and selecting members that could really help solve them), was far more responsive to the concerns of Martinez residents than many ever expected. By the same token, delaying a vote and misrepresenting the on-going threat of flooding was far less responsible than the trusting voters expected. None of us got what we anticipated. We have all learned new things about the city:

(Some of us learned that they can listen. And some of us learned that they can lie.)

In the mean time, there has been a lot more attention paid to the way decisions are made and financed in this town. Our own Linda Meza started the campaign to organize a fourth of July parade for next year, and started “The Spirit of Martinez” blog and column for the gazette. I became involved with a group of citizens who were interested in fleshing out issues for the council candidates this year and will be working to make their individual differences clearer with a “Seeking Council” column and a debate. Along the way I’ve spoken to teachers, parents, refinery workers, shop keepers, environmentalists and Kiwanis club members and I can’t be the only one who has noticed beavers broadening my social circle.

Beavers change things: It’s what they do. Thanks Dr. Stack for noticing and asking the right questions. Now that beavers are being reintroduced to Scotland, maybe you can document their civic impact in your own frontyard.


And Build: Signs of a Healthy Estuary

Today’s guest blogger is Lisa Owens-Viani from the San Francisco Estuary Project. I met Lisa when she contacted me for photos of our beaver family to include in the 2008 State of the Estuary Report. Since then I have been bothering her with questions, which she very kindly answers when she can, or sends them along to others who might know. Read her post in its entirety; she’s a science writer who really understands the relationships between healthy waterways and healthy habitats.

 

When the beavers first appeared on Alhambra Creek in late 2006, I thought it was a quirky anomaly, probably not a long-lived phenomenon, but hopeful and interesting. Yet almost two years later, they are still here, managing to survive amid humans, flood control, and politics—and even reproducing. I can’t help but wonder if the restoration projects the city, creek advocates, and flood control folks have engaged in over the past decade at the mouth of the creek as well as upstream weren’t part of the enticement for the beavers, particularly the delicious willows planted as part of biotechnical bank stabilization efforts. Now that the paddling, diving, yellow-toothed critters are here—and seem to be content and thriving—we face a challenge: to see whether, even in an urbanized landscape, we can restore these ecosystems for the creatures that once lived in them, and co-exist despite challenges. The high level of public interest in the beavers is certainly a vote for peaceful coexistence, and regulatory and flood control agencies are trying as well, with Martinez City staff helping beaver expert Skip Lisle install a pipe to lower the dam height in a way the beavers wouldn’t object to.

Geographically, the beavers have lodged themselves not only near the mouth of Alhambra Creek, but also mid-Estuary, in the Carquinez Strait “chute” that connects the Bay to the Delta. This area, where the fresher waters of the Delta meet the saltier, ocean-influenced waters from the Bay—the San Francisco Estuary—is the end point of a vast watershed: the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, which flow into the Delta, drain approximately 40 percent of the state. The San Francisco Estuary Project, where I work, is one of 28 estuary projects throughout the United States that are part of the National Estuary Program. Mandated by Congress in 1987 to improve the quality of estuaries of national importance, these programs each establish a Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan to meet the goals of Clean Water Act Section 320.

In 1993, the San Francisco Estuary Project completed its Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan (CCMP). When the CCMP was signed in 1992, 44 signatories representing hundreds of stakeholders pledged to “achieve and maintain an ecologically diverse and productive natural estuarine system.” Like the 27 other national estuary projects, the San Francisco Estuary Project is a forum where region-wide issues are aired, a source of support for policy development and project work on a watershed/ecosystem basis, and a provider of up-to-date information on the San Francisco Bay Delta watershed and the many sub-watersheds that comprise it. Every other year the Estuary Project convenes a “State of the Estuary” conference at which scientists and policy makers present the latest information on the Estuary’s condition. The latest State of the Estuary report—“A Greener Shade of Blue”—can be downloaded at www.sfestuary.org under “Documents.”

The Estuary Project partners with environmental organizations and non-profits, local, state, and federal agencies, and businesses and industry from the 12 counties surrounding the Bay-Delta, and the public to implement the CCMP. Over the Estuary Project’s 20-year history, the Project and its partners have implemented many of the actions in the CCMP and fostered an environment out of which an array of new programs and partnerships have hatched and flourished. The Estuary Project provides funding and technical assistance to agencies, municipalities, and organizations to implement the recommended actions contained in the Management Plan. Each year Estuary Project staff, in partnership with the Implementation Committee, made up of representatives of the Project’s many partners, develop a work plan directing activities for that year. The Friends of the Estuary is the Project’s non-profit partner; Contra Costa Public Works Department’s Mitch Avalon and Friends of Alhambra Creek’s Igor Skaredoff are both active members of its board. The Friends are charged with helping develop public involvement, education, communication, and advocacy programs for the Estuary and serving as a watchdog for CCMP implementation.

 

Other Estuary Project partners include the state Coastal Conservancy and the Bay Area Open Space Council. In July, after conducting a public survey, the agencies chose the slogan “Nature Within Reach” for a new Bay Area license plate. The money from license plate purchases will go towards more open space preservation, trails, and wetland restoration. More wetland restoration in turn will hopefully mean more protection against climate change and sea level rise, and more habitat for more wildlife. “Nature Within Reach” won the survey, I think, because so many of us in urban areas value living near the Estuary and its wildness—with opportunities to see wildlife like the beavers close to home.

 

Alhambra Creek’s beavers may be a sign that the Alhambra Creek watershed is healthy enough to support creatures like this, at least in part due to the restoration work done by the city, Public Works Department, and Friends of Alhambra Creek. The Urban Creeks Council and others have spotted steelhead in the creek as well, another sign of health. The beavers and the steelhead show that restoration efforts can pay off: that one watershed can make a difference, and that we can restore the Estuary by restoring its watersheds, large or small. As Mitch Avalon puts it, “The local watersheds feed the Bay. It’s like a human body—if you’re eating poisoned food, your system isn’t going to be healthy. These watersheds provide rearing habitat for species that go down and live in the Bay—you’ve got to look at it as a whole system.” For more on the restoration work that has taken place on Alhambra Creek see http://sfep.abag.ca.gov/pdfs/newsletters/insert_june06.pdf.

 

Watch for an in-depth story on the beavers by well-known local natural history writer Joe Eaton in the October ESTUARY newsletter (download past issues at www.sfestuary.org). Every other month, ESTUARY presents the latest news on Bay-Delta water issues, restoration efforts, and the many programs, actions, voices, and viewpoints that contribute to implementing the CCMP. To receive the October issue as part of a free, three-month trial subscription of ESTUARY, contact Paula Trigueros at the Estuary Project ptrigueros@waterboards.ca.gov.


So I went last night to see Chekov’s Uncle Vanya at Cal Shakes which was a smart, unsentimental and effective production. Given the past year’s events I heard the delivery of these lines in a new way. Outside the planetary pull of the families’ little drama, Doctor Michael Astroff has a committment and a dream. He is saving the forests of Russia, replanting trees, buying woodland, encouraging responsible use. He has already noticed the relationship between loss of habitat and loss of wildlife, and he knows his country will be the poorer for it. He has the foresight to see that his small actions might someday, a thousand years from now, make mankind happy.

ASTROFF. Why destroy the forests? The woods of Russia are
trembling under the blows of the axe. Millions of trees have
perished. The homes of the wild animals and birds have been
desolated; the rivers are shrinking, and many beautiful
landscapes are gone forever. And why? Because men are too lazy
and stupid to stoop down and pick up their fuel from the ground.
[To HELENA] Am I not right, Madame? Who but a stupid barbarian
could burn so much beauty in his stove and destroy that which he
cannot make?

(Or force a keystone species to leave when he is bringing wildlife and interest to the city?)

Man is endowed with reason and the power to create,
so that he may increase that which has been given him, but until
now he has not created, but demolished. The forests are
disappearing, the rivers are running dry, the game
is exterminated, the climate is spoiled, and the earth becomes
poorer and uglier every day. [To VOITSKI] I read irony in your
eye; you do not take what I am saying seriously, and--and--after
all, it may very well be nonsense. But when I pass
peasant-forests that I have preserved from the axe, or hear the
rustling of the young plantations set out with my own hands, I
feel as if I had had some small share in improving the climate,
and that if mankind is happy a thousand years from now I will
have been a little bit responsible for their happiness. When I
plant a little birch tree and then see it budding into young
green and swaying in the wind, my heart swells with pride and
I--[Sees the WORKMAN, who is bringing him a glass of vodka on a
tray] however--[He drinks] I must be off. Probably it is all
nonsense, anyway. Good-bye.

“Find something outside yourself, that is yourself. Then devote yourself to it with all your heart.” Be it birch or beavers. Nice Farmer’s Market today. Lots of friendly faces. Tonight much activity at the tree past the “third dam”.  Looks like the beavers are making a food cache directly across from the tree.  Watch for yourself.  They break off a branch, then cross the creek and dive in the same place every time.  I guess being stored underwater keeps leaves fresh; like a fridge. Smart beavers.

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