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


One of the exciting local development that befell yesterday is that the beloved Tulocay Creek in Napa got their very own flow device! (Apparently no one tells me anything around here anymore), but both Robin and Rusty say they knew this was in the works. I don’t know if there will be any media coverage of the event, and can’t tell if both Napa county supervisors AND Napa RCD shared the cost, but I’m happy to say that the beavers in Tulocay Creek got the official “permission” slip yesterday. Here are some photos Rusty sent of the installation. As you can see it’s a big job!

I guess this means the beavers can stay even when they build that new hotel. I’m sure we need to thank Supervisor Brad Wageknecht for making this happen. He was at our beaver festival this year and had a nice little chat with our Councilman Mark Ross. Leave it to Napa to do the whole thing without the media circus!

It’s wonderful to think that this was once unknown on the West Coast and now flow devices are all around us! Rodeo. Sonoma, Napa. and soon to be Auburn and Lincoln!

Thank you Kevin and Swiftwater design! And thank you Mike Callahan for passing on the trade!


Guess who turns ONE today? Our friends at the Beaver Institute, that’s who!In honor of their first year Mike Callahan is offering his first ever professional training program for future beaver managers everywhere!

For the upcoming year we are excited to start training beaver specialists. Our goal is to train 100 professionals in 5 years to promote coexistence with beavers across North America. Beaver Institute course graduates will embrace the critical role that beavers play in creating vital and vibrant ecosystems and learn the technical skills needed to nonlethally resolve beaver conflicts. For more training course info go to: https://www.beaverinstitute.org/education/get-training/.

In recognition of both our one year anniversary and the launching of our training program, we are announcing a Matching Fund Drive for student scholarships. Your support can help a worthy student learn and implement nonlethal solutions to beaver issues.

Imagine a world with 100 new beaver specialists! If Mike gets his wish,2023 just might turn out to be the year of the beaver! Mike is looking for funding help to match scholarships. Dig deep into the couch cushions, because the heating planet thinks this is worth supporting!

If you act now, your donation will be matched, dollar for dollar (up to a total of $5,000), by one of our kind supporters. Please generously contribute to our efforts to train progressive beaver professionals via PayPal.

Donate now to double your donation, and imagine the satisfaction of learning which grateful student received your assistance and how many beavers and ecosystems they will preserve! Thank you.

Donate Here


Mike Settell and the Watershed guardians are doing the hero’s work of trying to teach about beaver benefits in Idaho. There are easier places to change hearts and minds, believe me.
Our friends in Idaho have been pulling this off long enough to be very impressed. But this year the event has been pushed back to September. I assume for all the usual reasons that might require a change of plans.

Watershed Guardians fifth annual Beaver Dam Jam rescheduled to Sept. 15

POCATELLO — The date of the fifth annual Beaver Dam Jam, a music event to support beaver conservation that will host an open jam competition, raffles and demonstrations, has been moved to Sept. 15.

The event was originally scheduled for July 28. It will now run from 4 to 10:30 p.m. Sept. 15 at the Mink Creek Pavilion.

The event includes food, a silent auction, raffles, a singer-songwriter contest and more. Headliners will be the Eclectics and Shawn and the Marauders. Watershed Guardians provides shuttle transportation to and from the event. On-site camping is available.

Think for a moment about the coordination needed to put this together every year. Shuttle? Campground? Ticket Sales? Publicity? Silent Auction? That’s some serious logistics involved in making this all happen.

Our beaver festival lasts exactly 5 hours once a year and I cannot imagine making it a millisecond longer. It’s a lot to take on.

I’m grateful every time I see that Mike and his merry men are up to the task!

Meanwhile I’ve been working to restore the ‘sightings page’ of the website. Even though our beavers aren’t visible at the moment, it’s a wealth of data that I wanted back. When you think about it, its a documentary of wildlife sightings, beaver behavior and observations over a decade. So I thought that was worth keeping. You can always access it through the ‘About us’ drop down menu, or go here.

There’s lots to love and hate about the new computer. My beaver decade saw three different cameras taking footage in three different formats, so it was a bit of a scramble to find everything. But I did find some very special footage I thought was lost early on. I had transferred it to my new mac at the time because I thought it would be safer, which turned out not to be true. I thought it was gone. But apparently it was just lurking.

Listen to our voices while I’m filming and you can see how early in our beaver career this happened. July 28, 2007. We practically know nothing. I even comment that some of the kits are ‘older’ than the others.

And Jon agrees with me!  I’m not putting it on youtube because I don’t want to compress it. But click on the ‘four” to see it on this site. And turn your sound up to enjoy our beaver innocence!

four


Look at your calendar. Guess what today is? For 10 years of my life today was the day of the beaver festival! First Saturday in August. I can barely believe it. I’m so relieved we’re in the new park and everything worked out with the transition. But let’s just take a moment to remember the old park and everything those years gave us.

Okay, we took one and we’re done. Long live the new park!

And hurray for Utah where there’s a very nice homage to beavers today on Utah Public Radio. It’s not very long. You should listen. Remember it’s Utah so they do not mention Ben’s book at all. Because they don’t need to be prompted to know better.

Leave It To Beaver on Wild About Utah

17 hours ago
 
Nice job Ron, although you’re wrong to say beavers just make things better in natural areas. Beavers in cities make a huge difference too if folks are smart enough to let them. Just ask us!
 
Speaking of smart folks who want to let beavers make a difference, I heard from our friend Carmen in Texas yesterday. The beavers on her lake are still hanging around despite the efforts her neighbors are making to trap them. Carmen is trying to lure them to a spring near her property and away from danger. Looks like it’s working. This was a photo of a favorite tree of hers,
Beavers certainly come with their own set of challenges, that’s for sure. But Carmen is up to the task and got help wrapping all the trees on her land yesterday.  The chewing doesn’t go all the way around, so she is hopeful by some miracle that tree will make it.
 
When I see chewing on a tree that big, I think yearling. I’m sure the adults know better than to take on something that crazy. That beavers eyes are bigger than his stomach er teeth!
 
Oh and just so we don’t totally forget Ben’s book today, I have two little presents for him. The first is that I added a library link to some of the best reviews he’s had so far. And the second is this adorable photo new member
Lynita Shimizu posted on the beaver managment Facebook page. I agree that Eager makes a great summer read!
Lynita Shimizu

On the Refusal to mourn the death, by fire, of a child in London

Secret by the unmourning water
Of the riding Thames.
After the first death, there is no other.

Dylan Thomas

Yesterday a neighbor sent the sad news that there was a dead beaver in the creek near Starbucks. Jon went down and found it was truly horribly our newest kit, first filmed in late June, whose dam had been destroyed by someone impatient with the water. Jon retrieved the little body and checked it out for injuries but there was no obvious sign of trauma. There is no way to know whether this death was the result of the water loss leading to an exposed home,, some disease unique to him or whatever affected our 2015 kits. But we have a few things we can rule out, It wasn’t salt water because of how far upstream they were. It wasn’t human feeding or poison because so few people knew about it. And we had one kit survive since then and grow up fine, so I assume its unrelated.

I have to guess  for now there was some illness in the kit. I did think it a little odd that Moses filmed it with its parent so late in the year. Usually by late June our kits were swimming on their own and had the run of the creek. Maybe this one was weaker or need more care? We will never know. We can only observe and do our best to understand.

I know, its not enough.

But however dangerous our creek is to beavers, we have to remind ourselves that it is much, much safer than most creeks where most beavers find themselves. Rest now, little one.

There’s good news too, because life is like that – terrible and joyful mixed together. Ben’s book was reviewed in Audubon magazine yesterday and beaver benefits extolled for the world to see. Let’s hope everyone takes a moment to realize that beavers help birds.

A World Without Beavers Is a World Without Wildlife We Love

Leave it to beavers . . . to fix the environment for us.

For millennia, Castor canadensis have shaped landscapes with their dams, turning scrub into meadows and flood waters into wetlands. But the rodent’s role has long gone unappreciated. So unappreciated that in the late 1800s, beavers nearly went extinct in the United States and Canada due to decades of fur trapping and extermination. The European species faced a similar plight, dropping to just 1,200 individuals around the same time.

As one of the fastest-declining habitats, wetlands everywhere could use this kind of a boost.

Beavers bring order to the chaos by pooling water into wetlands, producing benefits for wildlife and humans alike. For example, ponds created by the four-foot-long rodents in Rocky Mountain National Park have cached an estimated 2.7 million megagrams of carbon. Photo: Enrique R. Aguirre Aves/Alamy

And then there are the beaver-loving birds. Trumpeter Swans, which have faced their own up and downs across North America, like to stack their 11-foot nests on top of the rodents’ fortresses. Farther west, Greater Sage-Grouse sip at beaver meadows, and Yellow-billed Cuckoos seek shade in cottonwoods, watered by their fat-tailed friends. In total, beavers are credited for enhancing bird diversity on three different continents. Without them, the forests would be less musical, and birding would be way more frustrating.

Appreciation is the key to keeping beavers—and everything they’ve built—around in the landscape. When we don’t understand our most common creatures, our world becomes smaller; we lose sight of nature’s complexity and all that’s irreplaceable. “While organisms have evolved to fill niches provided by nature, neither beavers nor people are content to leave it as that,” Goldfarb writes. “Instead we’re proactive, relentlessly driven to rearrange our environments to maximize its provision of food and shelter. We aren’t just the evolutionary products of our habitat: We are its producers.” These are the words of a beaver believer.

What an excellent review from Purbita Saha, I’m always so happy when Audubon picks up the beaver baton. They have a lot of voices all across our nation and know how to pack a room. As a rule they are more friendly than feisty but if we can convince them that ripping out a beaver dam means kill a host of bird species as well, that should help.

I’ll remember to bring this up when I present to our own Audubon chapter this March. Reminding folks to be good to beavers is a great way to help all kinds of wildlife.

BEAVER FESTIVAL XVI

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