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


What do you know. Here I was proudly posting a single page of my urban beaver booklet yesterday when a friend let me know that The Fur-Bearers just released the finished product! This was undertaken with a grant from A seed of Change  for the the British Columbia Union of Urban Municipalities Conference a couple weeks ago. Perfect timing to motivate our work don’t you think?

You can see they delve into all the nitty gritty details of keeping beaver on an urban landscape, dealing with all the problems they might cause and how to fix them. There are some  excellent references at the conclusion for folks to go read more and a nice case study about our friends in Belleville Ontario,

To tell the truth, I’m a little dissatisfied by some of the effort. The discussion about beaver effects on the ecosystem is lackluster, it says their natural history is mysterious and there’s no real analysis of the cost-saving that comes with fixing the problem once. Only a single photo is sourced. But, as first strikes go, it hits a lot of the target. I especially like the last page which raises several issues I wish were discussed in more detail.

COEXISTENCE SUPPORTS YOUR COMMUNITY

Beavers are a natural part of our communities. Whether we’re in a big city, a mid-sized town, or a gathering of properties in a district, entire ecosystems are kept alive and healthy by the activities of our national animal.

The general public’s interest in environmental policy is growing alongside what will inevitably be conflict with nature as our communities continue to expand; even when one area isn’t growing, another is, causing changes that ripple out over property lines and boundaries. New solutions – ones that consider long-term consequence to ecosystems and the ethical quandaries of the past – must be found.

Municipalities and individual landowners are also facing increasing pressure from provincial (or state) and federal governments who download responsibility for managing issues related to the environment, wildlife and social programs. While this difficult change is a challenge, it is also an opportunity: necessity is the mother of invention.

Not every community will welcome change to traditional practices of wildlife and infrastructure management; not every community will accept staying with the status quo. Ultimately, this booklet was created to illustrate that innovation of non-lethal solutions is not only possible, but ecologically and economically responsible.

Basic fencing can protect individual trees, bushes, or crops from beaver activity; exclusion fences can prevent damming from starting on sensitive culverts or properties; and, with a little education and beaver-like hard work, entire ecosystems can be rebalanced to protect wildlife and infrastructure.

The Fur-Bearers are proud of the goals accomplished by working with municipalities and landowners in the past, and look forward to supporting your community through coexistence strategies.

If you’re like me, you read all the way to the very very end, checking every reference in the bibliography put together by Janice Wong. Is kind of a free for all with Ben’s new urban paper , Hood’s flow device study as well as Longcore’s “Management by Assertion”, but there is also a USDA article about keeping beavers out of culverts (?) and sadly zero mention of Pollock’s restoration Guidebook, which as we know has a very helpful section on urban beavers and their benefits.

It has the look of a reference section where you want your thesis advisor to sign off and are trying to make her think you read a great deal of material but aren’t exactly familiar with the quality of all of it. At the very end there’s some fancy lawyer speak says “Do not try this at home” or something to that effect.

This PDF/booklet and the material covered is for informational purposes only. We take no responsibility for what you do with this knowledge. We cannot be held responsible for any property or medical damages caused by activities listed here. We would advise you to check your local laws, and work with local, provincial/state, and federal governments to ensure you are adhering to all relevant legislation.By taking any information or educational material from The Fur-Bearers and/or this document, you assume all risks. You agree to indemnify, hold harmless, and defend The Association for the Protection of Fur-Bearing Animals (The Fur-Bearers) from any and all claims and damages as a result of any and all the information covered. By taking and/or using any informational resources from The Fur-Bearers, you agree that you will use this information in a safe and legal manner, consistent with all applicable laws, safety rules, and good common sense.
It was just a suggestion. Don’t blame us if it doesn’t work and beavers kill your grandmother. If you agreed to read it it means you agreed to indemnify us from any responsibility if something goes wrong.  My mouth would gape more at that statement but what I was mostly startled about was this one.
 
We strongly recommend working with a professional such as Beaver Deceivers LLC (www.beaverdeceivers.com) or The Beaver Institute (www.beaverinstitute.org.
 
Okay, now we like Mike and Skip too and trust them a great deal to get things right, but anyone with a ounce of history will be scratching their heads at this. You see up until very recently TFB has employed Adrien Nelson [a Canadian]  to do all their beaver installations. He was trained by Mike Callahan after they met at the second State of the Beaver Conference.  In 2017 Adrien did a webinar for them about installing flow devices and the area around Vancouver is filled with articles like this:

Volunteer help saves beavers and highway

Beaver dams threatened to flood a section of Highway 101 in Egmont, but thanks to two days of volunteer efforts, the road is now safe – and the beavers are, too.

Members of the Furbearer Defenders group Lesley Fox, Jim Atkinson and Adrian Nelson and Friends of Animals member Dave Shishkoff travelled to Egmont on July 31 and Aug. 7 to install two pond levellers and some exclusion fencing to appease the beavers and protect the roadway.

Adrian was the face of beaver management but no longer is. Go ahead, if you don’t believe me and do a search at the top of this page for his name which will come up 25 times doing installations for furbearer defenders all across the region. Not any more. Which is too bad because he is a friend of this website and a friend of our friends and skilled at what he does. I also liked the fact that he was a young man and could keep doing this work long after Mike and Skip had retired.

All good things come to an end. I’ve heard through the grapevine that the separation wasn’t amicable and since the parting advice of this booklet is to hire an American if you want this done right I’m going to guess that things haven’t softened.

It makes the launch of the book a little bitter sweet. Saving wildlife would of course be so much easier if people and their personalities, egos and feelings weren’t involved. I know beavers themselves are very happy it’s published, They don’t much care who works with whom as long as they’re not killed outright, and we should strive to remember their happy pragmatism.

Congratulations TFB on the excellent new resource you have made available to muncipalities and beaver supporters everywhere. I’ve made a link at the sidebar for people to go explore.

 

 

 

 

 


October is the month I said I’d work on my booklet about urban beavers for BeaverCon 2020. Some pages are going better than others. But I finished Skip Lisle’s piece on culverts yesterday and am very happy with how it looks. He very kindly wrote something up and said it was okay to share on the website too. If the print is too small to read in this image double click on it and it should popup as an insert.


I especially like the idea of culverts being the most ideal damming site EVER made. It certainly explains their popularity. And don ‘t you just love the phrase “Beaver Magnets”? I had to try my hand at making a graphic for that. Skip has a talent for naming things, I’ll say that much.

I’ve been working the back cover too, using images from friends we met over the years. What do you think? I want it to seem like they’re getting beavers whether they like it or not and encourage them to start thinking of long-term solutions.

 I have a few other states I want to add to the mix but I think that gets things started. I’ve also been working on the community education and response pages, maybe ultimately as a centerfold with Amy chalking beavers as the background. These took a while to make but I’m quite fond of them.
Today I’m working on something Mike Callahan wrote about using levelers to control pond height. I was thinking I’d like an urbanish friend to write something about protecting trees.  know Sierra Wildlife Coalition has done a lit but I’d love to show off beaver-mindedness in another state. Maybe Jakob Shockey or one of the groups he’s worked with? Any ideas spring to mind?

 


Every now and then you run into a city that has dealt with some beaver-killing pushback in the past. A bunch of residents circulated a petition or picketed and don’t want beavers killed. The city officials calm down the rabid press saying ‘there there’ as loudly as they can and someone puts in a garden rake and calls it a beaver deceiver and promises get made not to trap the beavers again unless they really really have to.

Last may we took a visit to Cumberland Rhode Island where the exact scene was played out, only instead of a rake they used a giant metal cage which I said looked like it was leftover from shark week. Remember?
Oh you know what they say. We tried being humane and it didn’t work. Now we have NO choice. It’s like your mother picking up the pieces of the broken flintstones glass and saying “I guess we just can’t have NICE THINGS!”

Cue the failed trail.

Monastery trail might have to be abandoned

CUMBERLAND – Walking along the Old Road Trail at the Cumberland Monastery, a path of straw now covers the muddy ground where a wooden footbridge used to stand.

Residents wondering when the bridge, previously located at a spot near the town’s highway garage, will be restored may be out of luck, as town officials told The Breeze that there are no current plans to put the bridge back.

“That trail is going to have to be abandoned,” said Frank Stowik, head of the town’s Highway Department, According to Stowik, the trail is currently wet and unusable, and while the water table is at its lowest right now, after a couple of good rainstorms, it will be under water again.

The town had added the “beaver deceivers,” gravel, and bridge after a family of beavers moved into the area in 2014 and caused the trail to routinely wash out, Stevens explained.

We tried it your way. Now you have lots of beavers, a bigger pod and no bridge. See how that worked out? I guess the Monastery trail is just going to have to be closed. Get a stairmaster. The city can’t do anything about it.

You’ve seen these kind of kabuki dares before. Yesterday for example when Pacific Gas and Electric said, okay if you’re determined to sue us for fires started by our power lines then we’ll turn the power off when there’s fire danger and make you remember how important we are in the first place. Gosh we might have to close the caldecott tunnel. That will be hard on your economy won’t it? Get a stair master.

Because of the time and expense related to the wetlands permitting process, Stevens said that the Rhode Island Land Trust Council is trying to ask the RIDEM for a waiver for beaver-related public trail management, hoping the agency will be more flexible when it comes to these specific scenarios.

To ask for the bridge back, the permitting process will require a survey, engineering drawings, wetlands delineation, and consultants, which takes time, Stevens said.

“Ultimately whether we did it right away or down the line, it was clear it had to be removed,” he said.

Wait, I know this one! There are specific rules and costs for fixing a trail in wetlands that you’ve dragged your heels on for years. And now you’re hoping that maybe you can use the beavers to waive some of those requirements! Just like Martinez did when it pretended the sheetpile along a certain mogul’s property like was a beaver project so they could use restricted funds to pay for it. Gosh there really is NOTHING new under the sun.


That video ends somber because during that work was the first time we ever saw mom’s eye condition and even though I don’t think it had anything to do with why she died 16 months later I am sure the stress of having your home destroyed had something to do with her health. Ancient history. I guess that’s all blood under the bridge now, as Edward Albee once said.

I bet you didn’t even know that the when Ben Goldfarb first sent me his manuscript for review it had a section on the monstrous Martinez sheetpile story and as much as I wanted to shame the city for their fraud and expose it all I ultimately begged him to take it out because I thought it would make too many powerful voices too angry and harm the chances of  whatever beavers we had left.

I figured at the time I got one get one coupon for change and Ben who was basically finished with the book and had his editor’s blessing to everything he had written, would maybe consider the change out of the goodness of his heart. Believe me when I say there were other places I wanted to use that coupon, in the description of my home as full of beaver tchotchkees for example, or to make me sound slightly smarter and less kooky than I did. But I nobly used the coupon  for the beavers. And thankfully, he agreed to change it. So the sheetpile story will remained untold- except by me on this website which we all know perfectly well nobody reads.

Hey maybe that manuscript will be worth something on ebay one day. He’s getting pretty famous. Hmm too bad its not handwritten.


If you are a regular reader of this sight you will remember that this respected college, the Alma Mater of Hillary Clinton and Madeleine Albright, has had beaver problems before. Many times before. So many times, in fact, that the campus earned its own beaver killing headline “Welle-SLAY-college and a rewritten anthem.



Ahh that was some mighty good spoofing. I’m partial to a nice beaver killing alma mater.  Looks like times aren’t changing nearly as fast in the ivory tower as they are everywhere else.

Beavers keep Wellesley DPW busy

Wellesley Department of Public Works employees could be seen Wednesday removing debris from a dam constructed by beavers at the State Street pond near the track and football field parking lot. The beavers’ project was obstructing the culvert and causing flooding concerns along the Fuller Brook Path, according to Natural Resources Commission Director Brandon Schmitt.

The town left the beavers alone. Wellesley contracts with an outside firm for beaver removal/relocation in some cases, though only between Nov. 1-April 15.

Pinocchio! Beaver relocation is illegal in your state. Are you saying the DPW commits crimes November through April 15? Or are you just euphamizing readers into a foggy non-awareness of the T-word. Lethal Trapping.

“As the beavers are still there (and busy as beavers), it’s very likely the debris will be back and have to be removed again,” according to the town. “We work very hard to find a way to coexist with the beavers.”

Until November. When we can kill them.

A contraption called a Beaver Deceiver (best animal thwarting device name since the Mosquito Deleto) has been used to prevent damming at Rosemary Brook But State Street pond doesn’t have the depth and size to allow for this technique there.

Here that Skip? Your name gets a compliment, even though the school can’t be bothered to hire your expertise.  Here’s guessing they wouldn’t spring for Mike either, even though he’s an hour away.

Better just to complain and kill at regular intervals, then find a reporter who is so gullible she can lie about it with a straight face.


One of the very first things that our friends at Sierra Wildlife Coalition got involved with was the ironic situation at Taylor Creek where the forest service would rip out the beaver dams every year because the animals ‘weren’t native” and they got in the way of the Kokanee salmon which were truly introduced. They went round and round and round with the fine folks at Taylor creek, installing flow devices and wrapping trees. The publication of the history papers did a little to help convince them that beavers belonged and Sherry and Ted’s plucky persistence did the rest. Continued flow device adjustments are now tweaked by Toogee Sielsch who has valiantly stepped up to fill Ted’s shoes er, waders.

It’s good to see things have reached a kind of rapprochement.

Kokanee Salmon Spawning Creates Unique Experience at Taylor Creek

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Gosh don’t you wish you could see an underwater beaver swim by that observation window? Maybe someday, if we’re lucky.

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