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


Coming soon to a screen near you!

Virtual WILD Napa: Beavers in our Ecosystems

May 13 @ 7:00 pm8:00 pm

Beavers in our Ecosystems
Heidi Perryman>Join Napa RCD, Napa County Library, Friends of the Napa River, Napa Valley Vintners, WICC, American Canyon Community & Parks Foundation, and Carolyn Parr Nature Center as we welcome Heidi Perryman from Worth A Dam!

Heidi will be talking about the story of beavers in her home town of Martinez, CA, and how their dams can be and are beneficial to the creeks and communities around them.

Neither rain not sleet nor lethal virus shall keep the beaver advocate from her appointed routes. Or something like that. Since they offered me a virtual presentation I just had to accept! I will give you the registration link as soon as its posted. It’s free and you don’t need a library card, But my understanding is that they run the program on facebook live also, so  hopefully someone will be listening.

I had to embellish their logo a little. See if you can spot the difference.

Needing merriment on Sunday? Robin sent this excellent german video of the kissiest beavers ever. Mwa!
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Sure Canada may have outlawed assault weapons just two weeks after their first really big mass shooting, but they aren’t as smart as we think. They make mistakes too. For example the one thing I would expect a Canadian to recognize for sure is a beaver and to be able to tell it apart from an alligator.

But apparently not all of them.

Peel police say alleged alligator sighting in Brampton pond was a beaver

Social media lit up Friday night with reports from Peel Regional Police on its Twitter account of a possible alligator sighting in a Brampton storm drainage pond, but animal control authorities have since determined it was just a beaver.

Constable Akhil Mooken said dispatchers received a call at approximately 8:30 p.m. from someone claiming they had seen a 5-to-6-foot alligator in a pond in the area of Creditview Road and James Potter Road.

Officers and animal control officers were dispatched to the scene, but police said late Friday night the search for the alleged alligator would resume in daylight on Saturday. However, that Mooken said won’t be necessary after video footage showed the creature to be a beaver.

Ahh, the famous beaver-alligator confusion. It happens. I mean I’m so old I can remember a town in in southern Germany that thought they had a crocodile when they really had a beaver. I mean never mind that most crocodiles live in salt water and all of them are cold blooded and all of Germany gets a lot of snow. People get fanciful ideas about beaver.

They Just do.

I made this handy guide for the confused Germans years ago, Confused Canadians are welcome to use it though. It pretty much still applies.

“Animal control officers attended the scene and upon viewing video on social media of the animal in the water, they determined that it was a beaver,” he told the Brampton Guardian early Saturday morning.

I’m gonna go out on a limb and say this was the very best day to be a police officer ever. I mean you go out ready to crawl into a sewer and catch an alligator and when you get there your partner shows you a video of a beaver on your phone and you both spend the rest of the shift laughing and telling everyone else..

Just in case you wonder about the difference, Florida reader Kathy Rothman’s excellent capture can help you make the distinction:


May day. The day I promised we’d decide whether we would officially keep behaving like we were having a festival next month or not. Whether to keep arrangements for chairs and tables, exhibits, musicians and silent auction items or finally admit that this year, the thirteenth beaver festival, was not to be.

Yesterday I withdrew our grants to the city, the wildlife commission the community foundation. I wrote the musicians, the sound guy and the volunteers. The beaver festival will have to be like a hotel elevator with no thirteenth floor. We’ll continue on next year and I promise it will be better than ever, but this year, this one rotten year we’ll have to take a break,

I have been holding a beaver festival in the summer since Bush was president. Since Martinez had 9 beavers, Since I was working full time. I held a festival the year the beavers died, the year my father died, the year I was in the hospital with sepsis. Every year since 2008 But not this year.

We received such awesome donations to the auction this year, not the least of which was an original reed bed painting from Lizzie Harper of Wales that she did originally for an exhibit at the national gallery. I cannot believe how beautiful her work is, and we’ll save it for next auction. She was so kind also and I advised her to do more work with the Beaver Trust but to charge them because they could afford it. (Smile). She is so careful in her work you won’t believe it until you watch one of her videos of the process. She just dropped this video this morning of painting rose leaves. Go watch and be peaceful for a moment.

Well, I have the activity the cards and the spyglasses ready for next year. We have the prayer flags for painting. We have the beaver billboards from last year, the printed towels and Amy’s designs to look forward to. We’ll just have to shelter in place until that happy day.

The other day I talked with the Masters student from Humboldt researching the festival and got him in touch with some of our early supporters. The boy in this video is Noa who is now finishing his mathematics degree at UC Santa Barbara and was only too happy to talk to him. Watch it all and you feel so much better. There is nothing about this video that doesn’t remind me how I got on this journey and make me determined to continue onward next year.

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Well well well. It’s nice to know that APHIS is still getting paid work. With all the bad news they’ve seen some better days in California. Apparently Minnesota isn’t phased.

Minneapolis Parks: We didn’t put out a ‘killing contract’ on beavers and coyotes

This week, Ralph Sievert, the Minneapolis Park Board’s director of forestry, is answering a lot of voicemails about beavers.

That’s because last week, the board met (distantly) and approved a new wildlife management contract with the United States Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. It’s an unwieldly name for a government organization that, among other things, helps solve “conflicts” between people and wildlife.

Some of those conflicts, the board said, could include particularly aggressive urban coyotes, or maybe beavers doing beaver stuff in the wrong place at the wrong time. Commissioners gave the example of a few specimens that had been chewing up the trees in Sumner Field Park. Neighbors had called the Park Board’s forestry division to complain about the mess.

Did you ever notice how beavers and coyotes tend to get lumped together as ‘nuisance’ animals? I sure did. I’ve always said I’m honestly not sure which is harder to defend. But no one wants to sit by a ‘coyote pond’.

According to Sievert, you legally cannot shoot animals within city limits. That’s just language the USDA keeps in its contracts in case it needs to, for example, shoot a nuisance animal out in rural Montana. So that’s not going to happen.

There are no plans yet to kill any Minneapolis animals. Apparently, beaver activity at Sumner Field has calmed down this spring. Park staff think the pond water was probably a little too shallow for the beavers to comfortably winter there.

There haven’t been any catastrophes involving coyotes yet, either, although they’re a growing presence within city limits. Those were just some “examples,” Sievert says, of the type of situation that could merit the USDA’s attention.

There is also bad news for the beavers, and that’s that this contract, on a practical level, changes very little. The parks system already arranges for the killing of beavers on a semi-regular basis.

We will kill beavers on an as-needed basis. And now we don’t have to go thru the hassle of having a public meeting about it or hiring a trapper. Isn’t that great? It sounds air tight to me.

By the way, speaking of beaver ponds, here’s an excellent look at what Minnesota just prevented itself from having any of. If you need a little peace today save time to watch this video. It’s a mesmerizing look at the very best place to be.

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I’m not sure this has ever happened before. There are THREE very important beaver stories this morning meaning very good things about beavers and I cannot pick between the three. I’m going to have to profile each thing and you have to promise to come back and read the whole thing. I’m sorry to assign homework, but it’s necessary. They’re that good.

The first and most startling news is a profile piece about Emily Fairfax in the UC agriculture and natural resources blog.

From being an engineer to researching nature’s engineers

“When I came face to face with beaver dams for the first time, I had what can only be described as a transformative experience,” says Emily Fairfax, an assistant professor of environmental science and resource management at California State University, Channel Islands. While leading a canoe trip through the Boundary Waters of northern Minnesota, she encountered what she describes as “just these enormous, impressive features” – created by beavers. “You truly realize how sturdy beaver dams are while dragging your canoe over them,” she adds, laughing. “They are incredible from an engineering perspective.”

Despite being taken by the handiwork of beavers in that initial encounter, Fairfax says “I just put that experience in my back pocket for a long time.” After majoring in chemistry and physics in college, she went on to work as an engineer. “But, I kept going fishing, visiting wetlands and creeks, and realized I wanted to be out in these places in my day to day life.”

“Then, I watched the documentary Leave it to Beavers. It was about how beavers fundamentally alter landscapes. I was reminded of the beavers I’d seen in Minnesota and was like, I want to study this. On a bit of a whim, I applied to graduate school, and haven’t looked back. Now it’s all beavers, all day, and they make me so happy. It turns out rather than being an engineer, I was called to study nature’s engineers.”

I had NO idea that Emily was inspired by Jari’s documentary! WOW! The world might have been stuck with another engineer if it weren’t for that! I’m so touched and my mind is a little bit blown. I had just assumed she got involved because her thesis chair was interested or something. The article goes on to talk about her viral video and ends in her interest in California.

Working in California, Fairfax’s biggest task now is locating beavers. She notes that before beaver trapping there were likely upwards of 400 million beavers in North America, meaning they were everywhere. “Trapping took them down to 100,000, and now estimates put them back up to 10 or 20 million. They are prevalent in certain areas like the Colorado Rockies and the Sierra Nevada, but we still don’t see them often in many downstream areas that provide great habitat.”

For now, she says, “I’ve got students hiking streams just looking for signs of them, and when I give public talks, people will sometimes tell me about how they used to see them on a creek in the 70’s. That might not seem relevant, but that kind of information is so valuable. So now I’m basically saying to people, if you see a beaver dam anywhere in California, please tell me about it!”

I’ll make sure we all tell you when we see them! Ohh you are the hope of a new beaver generation Dr. Emily Fairfax. Make sure you read the Work to protect Sonoma beaver lodge begins

To prevent flooding and manage water levels in a Sonoma creek, a pond leveler will be installed where a family of beavers is living, Sonoma County Water Agency officials said.

The pond leveler will help water transfer through the beaver dam so that the pond doesn’t cause flooding. It will also assist with maintaining the habitat for the beavers, said David Cook, senior environmental specialist at Sonoma County Water Agency.

There was even an insert about my timing concerns, because the reporter was included in the email thread where I learned of it.

Heidi Perryman, of urban-beaver protection group Martinez Beavers, asked the agency to wait until kit — or, baby beaver — season is over, which is mid-to-late May. But Brock Dolman, program director of Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, which is partnering with the water agency and Swift Water Designs in the project, said they also would prefer to do the work outside of kit season and were prepared to do the install in March, but then COVID-19 got in the way.

Isn’t that just like Heidi, always poking her nose in and mucking around. Well I also heard from a neighbor that the beavers were busy that night trying to plug the outflow of the pipe so you may not have heard the last of this story. It’s good that a flow device was used. Hopefully the beavers can make it work. Fingers crossed.

The last piece of really OUTSTANDING news comes from Port Moody, B.C. See a lot of the challenges to the beavers have come from the fish hatchery folk which are saying that beaver dams stop chum. Jim and Judy have been doing their home work AND the city’s homework and heard from famous Fisheries Biologist Dr. Marvin Rosenau. that their stream supported coho salmon. The real kind not the hatchery frankensteins. And there’s all this data saying beavers are good for coho and no data at all saying they’re good for chum.  Which stinks.

But they got a go pro camera and have been using it to shoot underwater and GUESS WHAT THEY FILMED and Dr. Marvin Rosenau. identified right away in the beaver pond???

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It’s hard to see but unmistakable. Around the 55 second mark you can see it best on the upper left hand corner. Look for the while glint of its eye and then the wiggle of its tail as it moves forward. That would be coho fry. As in the real deal. As in proof of a beaver pond doing what it should. As in pass the coho birthday cake and lets have a party!

 

 

 

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