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

First a trick, then a treat…


This is a grisly look at the highway service in Johnsburg Illinois

JOHNSBURG — The town is weighing whether to crack down on private property owners who own regularly flooded areas that then damage public roads and bridges.Johnsburg Highway Superintendent Dan Hitchcock estimates Tropical Storm Irene caused $400,000 in damage to local infrastructure. Local highway crews had just completed some $370,000 worth of repairs from earlier spring and summer floods.

There really isn’t much worth mentioning in this article about the unique-and-never-before-faced-trauma-of-beaver-dams-flooding roads besides this pearl:

Hitchcock also fights an ongoing war against beavers and their dams. The local highway superintendent keeps a rifle handy and shoots problematic beavers.

That’s right. Highwaymen bring special rifles to shoot beavers. Protecting us all from rodents and the elements. Call me crazy but doesn’t any officer in this country already have a tool at his disposal for shooting beavers? Why does he need a special shotgun for that particular job? Oh maybe  the other bullets are counted or something. Rifle shots are spare-time bullets?All this time I’ve been worrying about USDA, Fish & Game, Trappers, Public Works, Transportation Districts, City Councils, County supervisors and the like. It never occurred to me to worry about the Highway Patrol. I bet depending on the state they don’t even need to report it or get a permit. Just point and click and voila, a new set of orphans for the rehabbers.

Wow.

Given the circumstances, this was really unavoidable (unless your screen is alot bigger than mine you will need to click on the image to expand it…but do, this was a sweet project).



1906 ------------------------------------------------------------ 2011



Now enough dirty beaver tricks, how about that treat?

The 1936 half dollar

Gertrude Lathrop, designer of the 1936 Albany, N.Y., half dollar, kept a live beaver in her studio to serve as the model for the animal on the coin. The beaver is shown chewing on a maple branch. The beaver was instrumental in the founding and development of the city of Albany; the fur trade flourished there in the 1650s and 1660s. The town was once known as Beverwyck. To this day, the beaver is remembered.

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