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


Time for more good news. This article by Eli Frankovich from the Idaho based Lewiston Tribune does what few others attempt: offer a sense of context for the current and past response to beavers, and recognizes the dramatic impact of Ben Golfarb’s book.

Leave it to beavers: Relocation effort paying dividends

More than a decade ago, before a water-loving rodent with a penchant for gnawing on trees became the animal du jour — its ecological powers heralded as a climate salve, ecosystem restorative and all around tonic of hope — the seemingly humble beaver brought two unlikely allies together.

Animal du jour” I LOVE that phrase. Remember all of you were loving beavers before it was the cool thing to do.

Joel Kretz, a rancher-politician with a penchant for theatrics and dislike of predators (cougars and wolves, in particular); and Mike Peterson, the executive director of the Lands Council, an environmentalist with the gentle mannerisms of an aged hippie and the resolve of a veteran of the Timber Wars, found themselves on the same side of an issue: beaver relocation.

In 2006, Kretz first co-sponsored a bill in the Legislature legalizing the nonlethal relocation of “nuisance” beavers in Washington. It was a progressive bill, one that acknowledged the oft-ignored importance of the world’s second-largest rodent.

While that so-called “Beaver Bill” didn’t become law until 2012, it set the stage for Washington to become the beaver leader in the United States.

I love an article that starts off with a good beaver history lesson and mentions that puns get overused in beaver stories. I’m not certain Washington, however, that Washington was the first to rethink beavers, even though it might be the first now. I would say Utah was the first first but Washington has become the new first. Does that make sense?.

Streams slowed by beaver dams and lodges create better habitat for animals and insects, collect silt, and store and cool water, among other things. In videos taken by the Lands Council in the Colville National Forest bear, moose, herons, cougars and more flock to beaver complexes.

Those successes have increased the social and political tolerance and love for the furred builders. Fueled in part by Goldfarb’s book, beavers are having a moment, their positive impact on everything from animals, to plants, to climate change being recognized.

I don’t think there has been another article discussing the impact of Ben’s book or the fate of beavers in general. In fact I don’t think I’ve ever read a reporter visiting the archives of his own newspaper to see how coverage has changed.

A trip through The Spokesman-Review’s “beaver” file in the morgue (the place where old newspaper stories are kept) is a grisly affair with more than a few bad puns and awful alliterations.

“Beaver meets end under car wheels,” reads one headline from 1956. “A beastly beaver terrorizing the Mississippi River city …” states an Associated Press story from 1994. “California firms fined for starving beavers,” goes another.

Now it’s not uncommon to walk the river bank and see those trees wrapped in a fine wire mesh, another sign of increasing respect and willingness to coexist with the industrious rodents.

Can I just pause here and say how much I LOVE this article and journalist? Eli Francovich is a true kindred spirit if beavers, I can tell you. And of this website in particular.

That isn’t to say it’s all peeled cambiums and roses. While Washington may have model beaver legislation and nonlethal removal permitting, WDFW still kills more beavers than it relocates. In 2018, 28 beavers were relocated, 1,251 were killed due to human-beaver conflict, and 730 were killed by trappers, according to WDFW.

Wow, A reporter that not only looks up the past stories on beaver trapping but visits the current information as well. If you were very naive you would think this happens all the time, but I can assure it doesn’t. Be still my heart.

That aside, the story of beavers in Washington is mostly one of cooperation and collaboration. While it may have been enshrined in law in 2012 with Kretz’s Beaver Bill, evidence of Washingtonians affinity for beavers goes back further.

Amongst the blood and gore in the beaver newspaper archives rests one 1968 article that seems to predict a more beaver-friendly future.

“Approximately 30 beavers each year are moved from one area to another throughout Stevens County,” the article states. “The beaver is important because of his contribution to conservation. By constructing his dams and ponds, the beaver provides homes and food for all forms of wildlife such as fish ducks, mink, muskrats, etc.

That’s a fantastic article.  I just love thinking of Lewiston, which is right on the border of Washington, peering over the state line at its neighbors and thinking “We should be more like them!” Let’s all copy Washington and Ben’s Book, okay?


Ben Goldfarb wrote last night that he had just met the author of a cool paper on the thermoregulation of bears. Apparently the animals have a lot of stored fat just in case food gets scarce and as the climate heats up they need to cool off regularly in ponds. And guess what just happens to make some of the awesome ponds they use?

American black bear thermoregulation at natural and artificial water sources

Michael A. Sawaya, Alan B. Ramsey, and Philip W. Ramsey

He sent along a great national geographic video of the pond soak phenomenon. But as it happens I already had footage of a black bear bathing in a beaver pond that was sent to me a few years ago by the VP of the Sierra Foothills Audubon. This  bear is enjoying the beaver pond by his house.

Willie Hall of SFAS filmed this bear taking a dip in the beaver pond hear his house in Grass Valley. Apparently he’s enjoying a fish dinner with his swim. Because Beavers Benefit Bears.

 

Ben was thrilled to see it and is sharing it with the author because he thinks he’d love to see it.

Of course beavers help bears. Why wouldn’t they?


Good news from our friends at  Wyoming Untrapped which had permission to run this ad on the last page of the Local Headwaters Magazine. The Headline reads “Climate Change Mitigation in Progress”.

I’m not able to embed the ad here but this is the excellent copy:

Beavers are born to build wetlands. Fight wildfire flooding and drought by ensuring water is available on our public landscapes. Prevent extinction of critical species by ensuring a complete ecosystem. Support a wide range of wildlife habitats including amphibians,fish and songbirds.

You may, and I think you do, recognize the photo as one taken in a certain Martinez California by our own Suzi Eszterhas. I believe that is Junior hauling off a willow branch generously provided by our own Jon Ridler. It’s pretty remarkable when you think about it all the places where the Martinez beavers have turned up. Including NOAA, USDA, and FWS. Considering all of these have photographers they pay for images, you would think people would notice the remarkable photos you are able to get when you allow beavers to live amoung you.

I’d like very much for it to catch on please.

 


You know how it is. You think you’ve seen it all. Tried everything, opened every door. And then one day, almost out of the blue Nancy Pelosi launches an impeachment inquiry and San Diego is relocating beavers.

About Dam Time!

So our friend Eric Robinson is really doing this. He is raising money to buy traps and I think Worth A Dam should help. I already told him he has to have a booth at the festival and explain it all. And he agreed!

The rest, as they say, is history.

Beavers flooding rifle range to be removed from Camp Pendleton

Experts say the beavers come down the Santa Margarita River each year and flood the rifle range at Camp Pendleton with their dam-building.

SAN DIEGO — Several beavers that have been causing issues at Camp Pendleton in North San Diego County are set to be removed from the Marine Corps base.  

A group of environmentalists that specialize in these types of animal removals has received approval to live trap and transport eight to 14 beavers. Experts say the creatures come down the Santa Margarita River each year and end up flooding the rifle range at Camp Pendleton with their dam-building.  

Previously, Marines at the base were lethally trapping the beavers each year as their population expanded. 

The group that traps the beavers will house them temporarily and the animals will have a health check performed by a veterinarian.  

The entire beaver family will be transported to release sites with the first batch going to Tule River Reservation near Porterville, California.  

A GoFundMe page has been set up to assist with the rescuing of the beavers.

Footage in this piece by Sarah Koenigsberg courtesy of The Beaver Believers. To learn more click here

The campaign now has nearly 400 dollars Click here to help out and get beavers relocated in San Diego! 


You know how it is, You work and work every day at a worthy task, like changing the beaver relocation laws in California or hey maybe impeaching a corrupt president who made deals with a foreign government to thwart our democracy, and it seems like you are getting NO WHERE, You’ve followed all the rules. You’ve done this all by the book, and you can measure the dramatic noneffect in nanometers.

It’s not working.

Then one day, everything changes. I mean everything.

Meet Eric Robinson a fairly recent beaver believer from Southern California who wants those reintroduction laws changed and fast for his very dry part of the state.   He tried talking to fish and wildlife, tried working with Kate Lundquist from OAEC who has been at the frontlines on this issue, working to get the law changed, And got impatient with all the nothing that was happening.

So he stepped out of line. Got a crowbar. And found the rusted gears most likely to move.

Eric spoke with the head of USDA who said they would be happy to give him some beavers. And with the members of several tribes who want beavers back on their land. And with Molly Alves from the tulalip tribe whose been doing this work in Washington for years. Then he talked with Doris at Sonoma Wildlife and got her to agree to house some beavers during transition. 

It went from impossible to it’s all happening. Molly is coming to do a training for Doris and her staff in October, and rusty wheels are in motion. Yesterday he was on the local news regarding the beavers at Camp Pendleton which they have been routinely trapping for years. Now he’s talking to SeaWorld about possibly being a Southern California stopover site. It couldn’t hurt their reputation. And they already have a beaver in their education program.

Oh and he has an acronym for the program. It’s called B.R.A.V.O.

Project BRAVO – Beaver Restoration Aquifer Vitalization Opportunities

Now the operation has a GOFUNDME campaign and you can help. Sometimes when the wheels of progress turn too slowly you just have to make your own.

Rescue Camp Pendleton Beavers

Currently Beaver are coming down the Santa Margarita River into Camp Pendleton every Spring where they are lethally trapped. This year we finally discovered a way to save them.  We are partnering with California Tribes to restore beaver to their native lands.   We will use the money to buy Hancock Live traps $450, Game Cameras to record our process $90, Food and Lodging for them while we collect the whole family $300, Veterinarian bill for health check up $360. Transportation to the release site at Tule River Reservation $300.

GO TEAM BRAVO! Eric and his merry volunteers could use your support.  This is pretty exciting to watch unfold.  Now we just have to do that other thing too, Stay tuned.

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