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


It’s been a rough year for wildlife. Anteaters and sloths burned in the Amazon and Koalas dying in the flaming forests of Australia. Not to mention all the wild spaces set aside by Obama and turned in to drilling fields by his successor. There are easier things to be than wildlife at the moment. But even though its been a crappy decade and some folks aren’t happy that democrats negotiated with the terrorist and made a funding bill to keep the government from shutting down, this is a sweet little tidbit that came out of the deal.

Congress Funds New Nonlethal Conflict-Prevention Positions

Congress and the President approved a spending package last week to keep the government running through the rest of the 2020 fiscal year. Contained within the legislation is a provision that NRDC and Defenders of Wildlife worked to secure: an appropriation of $1.38 million for the federal agency Wildlife Services to hire new employees dedicated to using nonlethal measures to reduce livestock-carnivore conflicts in up to 12 states.

The new employees will be modeled after three “wildlife conflict-prevention specialist” positions we’ve already worked with Wildlife Services to create—two in Montana and one in Oregon. In Montana, one of the specialists is a year-round fencing technician who works with landowners to install electric fencing around livestock pastures, bee yards, chicken coops, and other “attractants” across western and central Montana. The other is a seasonal “range rider” who has spent the last two summers protecting several herds of cattle on grazing allotments in wolf and grizzly bear country in the state’s northwestern corner.

The third specialist works in seven different counties in southwestern Oregon, using fencing, scare devices, her own human presence, and other deterrents to reduce conflicts with wolves, black bears, mountain lions, coyotes, and other wildlife.

Okay. so the article doesn’t SPECIFICALLY say that they’ll be teaching these specialists how to to install flow devices but good lord you can’t put up fences and chase grizzly bears ALL the time. I’m sure that the right pressure could be applied in the right places and make this more likely to happen.

Because of the effectiveness of these positions and the strategies they employ, over the last year NRDC and Defenders of Wildlife advocated for federal funding to create similar positions in additional states (including Washington, California, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan). After months of uncertainty, we were thrilled when, late last week, the spending bills containing our requested appropriation were signed into law.

We’re in the club! Now we just have to find out who the non-lethal officer is for our state and ply him or her with information about flow devices! Surely one of us knows someone who knows someone….hmmm…

But working together despite those disagreements is part of what makes our collaboration so compelling. Even with serious differences, we have found a way to join forces to provide meaningful, durable solutions for the landowners and rural communities most impacted by predators—while keeping carnivores out of trouble and alive on the landscape to fulfill their critical ecological roles. And perhaps as importantly, by cooperating in the face of our differences, we are also proving that even in such politically divisive times, it is still possible to find and work toward common goals—for the benefit of people, wildlife, and the country.

So beavers aren’t carnivores, I know. But non-lethal management of beavers in California could be good for salmon and steelhead and wildlife prevention. I cannot imagine that this won’t come up. All that remains is for us to find out who’s doing the actual work and slip some beaver deceivers into their calendar.

Just because its unlikely doesn’t mean it should be impossible?

 

Last issue released this morning. Say goodnight Gracie. When my very old house was built the gazette had already been running 40 years. It’s been a helluva run.

 

 


It’s a beaver day brimming with news. Starting with the Denver bike-path that knows it needs beaver help. Something tells me contact has already been made but I wrote them how to reach Sherri Tippie and here’s hoping things will be easily resolved soon. It’s her home town, so they should know the right things to do already.

Denver bike commuters can blame beavers for trouble on the Cherry Creek trail

Yesterday I touched base with the beaver watcher who alerted everyone in Sonoma, Robert Burkart. I remembered how upset and helpless we felt when our city did similar things to our beaver dam and I thought he’d want to hear from a supporter. Like I expected, he was really concerned by the what he saw happen to the habitat that he had come to care about. He passed along this video of part of the destruction.

Does this look like a ‘notch’ to you?

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Of course not. It never does.

Good news. Beavers fix things when we break them. Robin Ellison of Napa went by yesterday and took this photo of the cleanup.

And harking back to our story-telling conversation, this POWERFUL video spoke to me yesterday. It was shared by Dr. Travis Longcore who is a professor at UCLA and author of the Management by Assertion paper.  I could NOT watch this video and fail to think how amazing it would be to have a similar short piece using a child’s voice to explain why beavers matter. I have already spoken to some film making friends about just that, fingers crossed…

 


Sonoma follows up on its chain-saw massacre. You knew it would. You knew this was coming right? So people can chat about it over the breakfast table and garden gate. Good. Let’s hope it becomes another Martinez.

River otters and beavers are coexisting in a Sonoma creek

Sometimes it’s a case of mistaken identity, a river otter misidentified as a beaver – or the other way around – but both are here in Sonoma and living in close proximity to one another.

“If I had a dime for every time an otter was misidentified as a beaver I would not have to raise funds for my project,” said Megan Isadore, co-founder and executive director of the River Otter Ecology Project.

Photos of North American River otter provided to the Index-Tribune for a story about a beaver dam in Sonoma misidentified the animal as beaver. Isadore and others correctly identified the critter in the photo.

Nice work Megan. I appreciate the value of going to the experts. And I’m really glad the reporter contacted Megan and myself. But is it me, or does she get more of a respectful introduction?

“It’s a very common mistake,” said Heidi Perryman, beaver advocate of Worth a Dam, a non-profit organization dedicated to maintaining beavers in Martinez.

She said the two animals are found in similar habitat, but it’s not because they seek one another’s company.

“They are not best friends,” Perryman said. “They are like neighbors; neighbors who don’t really get along.”

Otters are carnivores, she explained, and will take a beaver’s baby (called “kit”) so beavers will protect their young and chase away otters.

Worth a Dam provides identification help on its website. Otters have long, sleek bodies compared to a beaver’s rounder frame. Beavers can weigh about twice as much as an otter. Otters are white in color around their muzzle with a lot of whiskers. Their tales are quite different, too. Where an otter tail starts wide at the back end it tapers into a point, whereas a beaver tail is flat, like a paddle.

Megan’s the executive director and I’m an advocate? ROEP gets a hyperlink and a funding plea and we get a mention? Did I bring this on myself? Did I speak too informally and not give my title?Sheesh. Always a bridesmaid and never a bride. I got some email the other day asking if I was still the founder and director of Worth A Dam. I couldn’t help it. I had to snork.

Yes, I’m still the director but not the founder anymore..

Perryman is upset that the agency referred to the hole as a “notch.”

“You don’t ‘notch’ with a chainsaw,” she said. “You notch a dam with a rake or a pair of clippers.”

She said it’s difficult to get agreement on what “notch” really means. “Ripping out the dam, even if that’s what they did, it’s not a problem for the beavers. They’re not looking for retirement.”

Well that sounds like me at least. The onery advocate. There should be a movie.

“In terms of the long-term plan, we will discuss it with our biologist, and develop a long-term plan,” which could include a pond leveler.

Cutting holes in the dam will not solve the problem of bypassing water, experts said. Beavers will just continue to fix whatever hole is cut in the dam.

Dugan said the agency installed a wildlife camera near the dam last week. They will monitor the dam, creek and beaver activity to help them plan for a long-term solution.

On the Sonoma Ecology Center Facebook page is a video, taken in July, of a beaver at work on a tree:

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Ooh I guess the water level has changed a little bit up that way! It sure makes you realize how handy it is for beavers when ponds flood. They can reach up much higher and get all kinds of access to things they never reached before.

Well, faintly wounded egos aside we are VERY happy that the reporter Anne Ernst followed up on this Christmas story, and that beavers may benefit from better attention being paid to their existence. We are glad too, that my video came in handy. And lived up to its name. This website is so cavernous now its been a while since I visited it although years ago the forest service said this was so helpful they wanted to post it on their site.

Post away, I said. We’re all about the sharing information here at beaver central.


Jeanette Winterson is the kind of author that draws you into an impossible tale with such urgent integrity that you never once stop to question whether its possible or not. The telling MAKES it possible, and it is a true-in-your-heart story that you will never find any air in your lungs to question. In real life she is a small severe lesbian that doesn’t wait to make an impression. A friend at Random house described being ‘inventoried’ on the elevator by her imposing gaze and not realizing until she got off that she was barely 5 feet tall.

Trust me. I’m telling you stories.

Stories change the world. Stories change the teller. Stories that soften hearts. Stories save beavers. But you knew that, right?

Jane Goodall On the Power of “Reaching People’s Hearts” as Climate Activism

Jane Goodall is a legend in the science community thanks to decades of her groundbreaking work with chimpanzees. But in recent years, the famous primatologist has shifted her focus to environmental activism. And in her time advocating for the planet, she discovered a pretty powerful yet simple technique for reaching people’s hearts and making real progress.

 As Goodall let slip later in the interview, she has found that the trick to helping people understand that we can all make a difference is pretty simple: telling stories.

“Being angry and pointing fingers, you won’t get anywhere. You just have to reach people’s hearts. And the best way I know is to tell stories,” Goodall said. “My job now is to try and help people understand every one of us makes a difference. And cumulatively, wise choices in how we act each day can begin to change the world.”

One of the things I learned most organically in this journey is not that beavers are good for the environment. Not that beavers help salmon or that their are ways to solve problems that arise when they move in. No. I once foolishly thought that science would be persuasive and that knowing the facts would make all the difference. It didn’t.

What made a difference was telling stories.

That wasn’t what I expected or what I really wanted. Touching hearts seemed somehow a mushy way to go about this important work. I wanted to persuade people with facts. I wanted people to see the historical inevitability of living with beavers. I wanted people to use the right names for things and understand what was at stake.

But it was the heart strings – not neurons – that saved beavers. I realized it that first random Earth day at John Muir.

It was our first exhibit so we weren’t even sure what to bring. We tossed in an old chew Moses had given us and some photos. And on a whim I stopped at the Wall green’s on the way in and bought a cheap set of felt pens and some paper. I thought maybe, if nothing else, we’d encourage some children to draw beavers. Make it a contest, put the winner on the website. We ended up with 100 and they were every single one priceless. There are two council members children in this photo. And there were more.

I had no idea the beaver illustrations would be so personal. So unique. So touching, One council member opposed to the beavers was going through a divorce and his ex came with the children that day. The children drew heart-felt beavers with “We love you” signs on it, Another council member came over afterwards and asked me not to post those pictures on the website or say whose they were “Because you know how things get complicated in families”.

Trust me. I’m telling you stories.

In the end that day laid the footprints for the path we would ultimately take. Touching hearts, winning votes for beavers, placing increasing pressure on the ‘respectable’ wing to do the right thing. We learned it all that day. Or the first lesson to it all.

Goodall then did what she does best: She told a short personal story to highlight that point. “I got lots of opposition from animal rights people for even talking to the people in the labs,” she said. “But if you don’t talk to people, how can you ever expect they’ll change?” A longtime opponent of experiments on animals, Goodall has become a leading activist in the anti-vivisection community.

There are certainly merits to challenging those with differing viewpoints — but for Jane Goodall, being patient, understanding, and attentive toward her opponents has brought her great success in making a difference in the world.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m nowhere near as patient as Dr. Goodall. And I think she completely underestimates (or pretends to underestimate) the enormous value of shame. But I agree with her about this. In the end its not about groundwater or science. It’s not about the role urban wildlife plays in creating social cohesion. It’s not about biodiversity or saving salmon or preventing fires.

It’s about telling stories.

12th Martinez Beaver Festival 2019. Photo by Cheryl Reynolds 6/29/19.

We must have been VERY good little beaver girls and boys this year because there are plenty of presents under the tree for us. Starting with a fantastic article to snuggle up and read from the UK site Reaction. You can bet our friends at the Beaver Trust are plenty excited.

Beaver fever – the wonderful benefits of bringing back the little people

Across the Northern hemisphere our pagan ancestors understood that the humble beaver is the key to the healthy functioning of land and water. The modern term “keystone species” may as well have been invented to describe the pivotal ecological role played by beavers. Native Americans revered the North American beaver (castor canadensis), referring to them as “little people” and holding in the highest esteem the great parallel beaver society that lived and worked alongside and in symbiosis with people.

Ahh you just have to love any article that starts off with a paragraph like this. I won’t ruin it for you and let you get your hot chocolate and go curl up under the tree to read the whole thing. I’ll just post one more irresistible quote,

But here is some really good news: the beaver is back, along with all of its magic, and it is already transforming our landscapes. That is absolutely something to celebrate. So be happy, and if you don’t yet have beavers in your area, ask why not.

WHY NOT indeed? Ohh that is guaranteed to put a smile on your face. Almost as big a smile as my very cheerful conversation with the reporter for the Sonoma Tribune yesterday who contacted me after I wrote her that the photos were otters and wanted to chat about cities and tools for living with beavers.  She didn’t want them harmed or messed with and was chuffed when I told her that articles like hers were the very best way to save them. She admitted she didn’t know much about beavers and asked the most beautiful question I have ever been posed. A question that put everything in stark and perfect contrast.

I knew right THEN it was Christmas and Santa was happy with me. And since he’s obviously happy with you too I’ll let you know what it was. My god I love it more than anything and want it on a tshirt and a coffee mug. Maybe on the back it could say “No. But they’re cute.”

HOHOHOHOHO! MERRY CHRISTMAS!

I hope you have a splendid day of celebration with friends and loved ones. I wish you cheer that’s not full of glitter and sparkle, but brimming with hygge so that your spirits are warmed, replenished and ready to meet the new year. It will be a bright year for beavers, I am sure, but one in which much will be asked of the brave souls who defend them!

I wrote this more than a decade ago and I still it still makes me smile. Click the video if you want to sing round the terminal with your family.


On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the second day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Two adult beavers and A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the third day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Three watching women<
Two adult beavers and
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the fourth day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Four furry kits
Three watching women
Two adult beavers and
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the fifth day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Five City Council!
Four furry kits
Three watching women
Two adult beavers and
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the sixth day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Six baby ducklings
Five City Council!
Four furry kits
Three watching women
Two adult beavers and
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the seventh day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Seven on committee
Six baby ducklings
Five City Council!
Four furry kits
Three watching women
Two adult beavers and
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the eighth day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Eight eager muskrats
Seven on committee
Six baby ducklings
Five City Council!
Four furry kits
Three watching women
Two adult beavers and
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the ninth day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Nine children laughing
Eight eager muskrats
Seven on committee
Six baby ducklings
Five City Council!
Four furry kits
Three watching women
Two adult beavers and
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the tenth day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Ten news reporters
Nine children laughing
Eight eager muskrats
Seven on committee
Six baby ducklings
Five City Council!
Four furry kits
Three watching women
Two adult beavers and
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the eleventh day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Eleven cameras snapping
Ten news reporters
Nine children laughing
Eight eager muskrats
Seven on committee
Six baby ducklings
Five City Council!
Four furry kits
Three watching women
Two adult beavers and
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

On the twelfth day of Christmas my true love gave to me
Twelve hatching turtles
Eleven cameras snapping
Ten news reporters
Nine children laughing
Eight eager muskrats
Seven on committee
Six baby ducklings
Five City Council!
Four furry kits
Three watching women
Two adult beavers and
A Dam in Alham-b-ra Creek

 

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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