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


Hurray for June! Guess what our Napa beaver friend saw yesterday morning for the very first time! Go ahead, guess!

2018 Napa kit: Rusty Cohn

Ohhh so beautiful! When I was done being ravenously jealous (and it took a while) I was very, very happy for him. i remember that breathless feeling very of kit discovery so well. It will stay fresh in my mind until the very last thing is forgotten. It  was something that happened annually for nine years, and every single time was different and magical in its own way. 2007 was such a surprise I hardly believed it. 201o was wrought with heartbreak.

2013 is probably my favorite, though.

There was so much more. Yesterday was a wild swarm of wonders, starting in the morning when city staff came to the park to hang the banners. I can’t tell you what an awesome feeling of pride it gave us to see them go up – both because they were amazing looking AND because the city of Martinez was spending manpower hours to benefit a beaver festival. After the all the hours they spent trying to get rid of them! There are 14 in all, and he carefully hung them and ziptied along the bottom to secure.

It turns out that winning the argument is the best revenge.

Doesn’t that look wonderful? Amelia did such a fine job! The ones the children colored at earth day were especially beautiful hung in place. We put all those in the center of the park so that folks could sit and study them,

While we were hanging them a man strolled by with his son to ask about the festival. He said that his son went to Creekside Montessori – the daycare right beside where the beavers live that happens to be run by someone who is not a fan,  The man said his son and all the kids knew about the beaver dam and the beavers and loved them! They would be sure to make it on the day.

(If there are better ways to put pressure on the adults to do the right thing I surely can’t think of any.)

Just to give you an idea of how bizarrely fluttery my day felt yesterday, I later got a note from Ben’s publisher saying the book was being released and they were sending me a copy. Then I got a note from Ben himself, asking very politely if he could have 100 copies delivered to the house for the events he is doing when he gets here. And posters too. Could we just put them in the garage of something until he arrives?

100 beaver books delivered to my house? Guess what I said! Go ahead, guess!

 


June is beaver month, and don’t let anyone tell you any different. It’s when we would start seeing kits for the first time, it’s when the mornings and evenings provide great dawn and dusk beaver watching, and this year it will be month for the largest beaver festival ever. EVER! Not the largest in the the county, or the state, or country, or the hemisphere. But EVER.

Jon picked up a proof copy of the brochure yesterday and it was stunning, I actually love the new shape, it looks more like a program and less like a children’s keepsake. Supposedly today is the day the banners go up in the park. Fingers crossed I will post pictures of their debut tomorrow.

June is also the month that Brock and Kate from OAEC will be presenting on beavers for RCD at the Napa library. Let’s hope they mention a certain FESTIVE celebration! Of course RCD decided to advertise the event with a photo from our own Cheryl Reynolds, because let’s face it. Martinez beavers are Worth A Dam.

WILD Napa ~ Beavers ~ June 13 ~ Bonus Tour @ 6pm!

June 13  – Beavers, Kate Lundquist and Brock Dolman, Occidental Arts and Ecology Center

6 pm – Special Tour – Meet behind old Napa Firefighters’ Museum

7 pm – Lecture – Napa Library

Yearling grooming 2010: Photo by Cheryl Reynolds Worth A Dam

Come learn about the fascinating history and ecology of beavers, and how they are helping both urban and rural communities across California restore watersheds, recover endangered species, and Increase climate change
resiliency. Brock Dolman and Kate Lundquist, Co-Directors of the Occidental Arts & Ecology Center WATER Institute, will share research done on the historic range of beaver in California and how you can contribute to the
Bring Back the Beaver campaign.

When: 2nd Wednesdays, 7 pm; NOTE: On June 13, special beaver tour will be held starting at 6 pm behind Napa Firefighters’ Museum

 

I’m sure they would welcome some out-of-towners if you want to go hear. Of course they should do the tour after the lecture so folks might get to see some actual beavers! As if this wasn’t exciting enough Rusty’s photos ran a spring series in the Napa register this morning.

Photos: Life at Napa’s Beaver Lodge at Tulocay Creek

Pair bonding: Photo by Rusty Cohn

  Updated featuring photos from Spring 2018!

The Tulocay Creek beaver pond is located next to the Hawthorne Suites Hotel, 314 Soscol Ave., Napa. At the creek, you’ll find river otters, mink, muskrats and herons as well as beavers. Here are some photos of the critters taken by local photographer Rusty Cohn.

“Since Beavers are nocturnal, the heat doesn’t seem to bother them,” Cohn said. “They come out a little before sunset and are mainly in the water. During the day they are sleeping either in a bank den in the side of the creek bank under a fair amount of dirt, or inside a lodge which is made of mud and sticks mainly.”

Beaver lifts stone onto dam: Photo by Rusty Cohn

Isn’t that an amazing photo? Go to the article to see them all. Such a nice flat stone. Do you think he’s looking for a skipping rock?

 


Yesterday was amazing. We met Amy in the park and she was delighted about the space and immediately kicked off her shoes to pace it off. She’s going to start early friday morning just so she gets more than half done the day before, and leave the beavers to finish up while people watch on the day. Amy is exactly like you’d imagine her, friendly, frank, and fun! She was so excited to be helping we were sure we were in a dream and never wanted to wake up.

She even said, gosh there are SO many negative ideas about beavers! Why is that? And told me she had just done some work for a large southern state client who had a huge nature reserve with rivers. Since he was interested in preserving the land and restoring wetlands of course she had asked about beavers – and he said quickly “No! Fish and game told us to kill them right away!”

Apparently they were told that beavers would dam up the streams and prevent OTTERS from getting over the dam.

Amy had the good sense to be shocked by this and was now joyful to be part of an event that celebrated beavers instead of lying about them!

Later in the day April and Alana Ludlow dropped off the sandwich chalk boards they had helped design over the weekend. The boards will be in a sign near Amy to explain what she’s working on during the festival. Didn’t they do a great job?


In case you don’t recognize them, here’s a much younger reminder four years ago after they had seen the Nature Documentary by Jari Osbourne.


A friend shared this on facebook yesterday and I just had to pass it on. Leo Leckie is a wolf tracker, writer and guide in Yellowstone. Apparently he is also very patient, because you don’t get to see this very often.

Our morning was enriched as we watched this Yellowstone beaver gather willow branches and industriously build upon an already-impressive lodge. — Leo Leckie
www.WolfTracker.com

We are off this morning to meet the street artist who will be ‘beaver-ponding’ Susana park at the beaver festival. We’ve chatted all year by email but never met face to face. (Rusty met her from time to time at the beaver pond, but never really realized who she was.) I tracked her down when I saw this article  in the newspaper last year. One of the photos showed her sketch of a beaver with just the bottom teeth visible as they should be – that told me that she knew beavers well enough to be a potential friend, so I introduced myself. Now all the pieces are locking in place. I want to show her the park and give her an idea what she’s working with. Hopefully she’ll be inspired and not terrified at how few trees shade the center plaza.

I’m just grateful that she loves beavers enough to help us out!


Winnipeg is the largest city in Manitoba Canada, just northeast of North Dakota. Being so near Saskatchewan their beaver IQs are predictably not the highest – although things are slowly moving from the lower registers. At least this article discusses wrapping trees. But.check out the muskrat photo they chose to tell their brave woes recently.

This is NOT a beaver

Winnipeg should stop killing problem beavers, St. James resident says

After sending a city-hired trapper off his property, a St. James homeowner is demanding Winnipeg change its policy on killing problem beavers.

Chad Hepp came home on June 1 to find a contractor setting up a lethal trap on the small beaver lodge abutting his backyard.

Complaints about beavers in the area started in 2012, said City of Winnipeg spokesperson Ken Allen in an email. The city responded by wrapping trees with wire mesh, to keep beavers from chewing on the trees, on both sides of the Assiniboine River every year since.

This is the first time since the complaints were made that the city set kill traps in the area to prevent further damage, Allen said.  “The homeowner who requested assistance with trapping also wrapped all of the larger trees in their backyard; however, the beavers started taking down trees in their front yard,” Allen said.

Hepp, who lives on the river side of Assiniboine Avenue, said no one from the city asked for his permission before setting up the traps. The hunter and fisherman believes two beavers live in the lodge — a mother and kit.

“I’m concerned some general contractor that works part time for the city can come onto somebody’s property and make a call like that,” he said. “I had to ask him to leave, politely.”

Mr. Hepp is a rare breed among men. He is upset that beavers would be lethally trapped (an objection of which we approve) and has wrapped trees in his own back yard, (a precaution which we applaud). So far so good. However, his shall we say romantic notion of the lodge containing only a beaver mother and kit  pair begs a little education.

“A single beaver is able to damage hundreds of trees each year. Beavers are only removed when there are no other options available to mitigate the damage they are causing.”

Winnipeg opts to kill beavers because the rodents can spread diseases if they are moved. Beavers are also territorial and if they are moved, will come into conflict with any beavers already living in the new location.

“Removal of beavers, when necessary, is conducted by a licensed trapper under approved provincial regulations utilizing humane trapping techniques,” said Allen.

Beavers will cause diseases if moved? You mean spread whatever they already have to other beavers? Or you mean like the plague, like make humans sick? Regardless of the ridiculous notion, Martinez doesn’t deserve to laugh at this because when CDFG agreed to relocate two of our beavers after much refusing they said they would first need to complete 6 weeks of quarantine. Which Lindsey Wildlife generously offered to be responsible for.

Of course the two beavers they agreed to relocate after quickly dispatching their family members would have probably died in that time anyway, so let’s just be thankful that never happened.

For Hepp, who lives closest to the lodge, the beavers have never posed a problem aside from an esthetic one — the jumble of sticks and tree limbs isn’t exactly pretty to look at.

“I get that they’ve probably chewed down the odd sapling, somebody was trying to grow an apple tree a few years ago or whatever but hey, that’s the cost of living on the river,” Hepp said.

Beaver lodges cause an aesthetic problem? You mean they’re not pretty to look at?

North American Beaver
Castor canadensis
Lodge in urban environment
Napa, California

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