Ohh my goodness, things are getting exciting around here. Last night the silent auction received a breathtaking donation from photographer Suzi Eszterhas, (which I’ll say more about on Sunday!), we found out we received a 1000 dollar grant from the city (hurray!!!) and our own amazingly talented Amelia Hunter sent me the first official draft of the brochure. The event looks sooo irresistible and fun! But I’m especially fond of our new back page:
This has been such a major commitment of focus and resources, it makes me awed at the beaver-worthy campaign that has been the better part of a year in the showing, and longer still in the formation. Our little festival looks feather lightweight by comparison to the momentous achievement that spanned at least four cities and several public showings of this uniquely valuable exhibit. It must have required the coordination of volunteers and experts from one end of Oregon to the other, and it was an undertaking that had (understandably) never been attempted before. I’m talking of course, about the art exhibit “Beaver Tales” which is in its final legs in the month of August with several dynamic tours and lectures.
The exhibit opens on July 31st at the North County Recreation District (NCRD) in Nehalem, 36155 9th Street. On August 4th, local naturalist and photographer Neal Maine will give a special presentation on Beaver Ecology at 6:30 pm, followed by a reception and viewing of the works in the NCRD Art Gallery. The exhibit will be on display through August 30th.
The exhibit will feature juried art for purchase, a portion of the sales will benefit The Wetlands Conservancy and Lower Nehalem Watershed Council. The traveling exhibit includes artwork of all kinds, from paintings to fiber, wood, stone, glass and ceramics. With regional and local artists displaying their work, this stop in Nehalem will bring together a multitude of styles and creativity.
Along with the month long display, there will be tours and other activities around Nehalem and Manzanita. Following the opening, join The Wetlands Conservancy for an Open House on August 5th from 1- 3 pm at the Doris Davis Wetland Preserve in Manzanita, located off Nehalem Rd at Beach St. The beautiful preserve is right in the heart of Manzanita. TWC’s land steward will be on site to lead a tour of this great North coast wetland.
The goal of the Beaver Tales Art Exhibition and events is to recognize the aesthetic and ecological significance our state animal plays in the creation and maintenance of wetland habitats. Beavers, though woefully misunderstood, actually create and sustain wetlands that aid in resuscitating wetland and riparian stream habitats. They play a central role in shaping our future as we prepare for transformations that a warming and changing climate may bring. The sponsoring organizations are working together to learn more about how we can work with beaver to conserve and restore natural systems.
What an amazing thing you’ve done touching so many lives and getting so many eyes to view beavers in a new way. I am completely in awe of you; Sara Vickerman Gage and Ester Lev. The idea of adding even a second half a day to the beaver festival fills me with soul-collapsing horror, I cannot imagine even for a moment how you had the energy and commitment to pull this off. It’s true that you work for large successful nonprofits that do big things and have huge talented staffs that actually get paid salaries, and admittedly you live in a state that has 50 more beaver IQ points than California, and 100 more than Martinez, but I am fully humbled by this undertaking, ladies. Hats off to you. You are truly my heroes.
In the meantime this plucky little beaver festival is chugging right along like the little engine that could. We’ll do what we can with what we have.
Yesterday there were a handful of swift volleyed crises that I swat back over the net with pretty admirable precision. It’s a lot of work planning an event like this but it’s SO much easier when I’m not also working full time. I can’t imagine how this ever all happened before. Can you?
Yesterday was media day, which started out with a charming little Gazette article about encouraging kids to take a bicycle tour of the murals. We were numbers six and seven!
The kids are out of school, acting bored, looking for something to do. The following articles outline tours of Martinez designed for the entire family and meet my “4 F’s” criteria: Fun, Frugal, Family and Fascinating. They are reminiscent of when my six children were young, money was scarce and minds were curious. The first tour, and possibly the longest, I call:
Murals of Martinez!
Continue east on Escobar and immediately at the little bridge look on the left for the ceramic tiles, this is next to the Creek Monkey Tap House. This is the site the famous Martinez Beavers and is our sixth mural. The tiles were drawn by local school children. Their imaginations show the wonderful life of our beavers. This is a good place to park, sit for a while and take a look at Alhambra creek and beaver dams, maybe even see a beaver or two. A great family educational opportunity. Our Beaver Festival is held annually on the first Saturday in August.
Continue on Escobar about two blocks and turn left onto Ferry Street, go one block, turn left onto Marina Vista. Travel about two blocks on Marina Vista (stay to the right) and just past the entrance/exit to the Amtrak Station is our newest mural: “Martinez Beavers”. It was commissioned by our local beaver advocacy group Worth-A-Dam as a memorial project to honor the memory of the Martinez beavers after the local beavers had all but disappeared from our local waters. But on May 2, 2016 a sighting occurred and it was soon confirmed that the beavers were back! Now the mural is being hailed as the :Un-Memorial” mural. This beautiful work of art was completed by artist Mario Alfaro (of the plaza history mural fame).
How much do I love seeing my word “UNmemorial” in the Gazette? Very, very much I can tell you. And I’m even happier that it’s meaning still holds. Generating interest in the beavers through artwork has always been a cornerstone of our work. And this year is a blazing example, earning a fantastical festival promotion also from Jennifer Shaw for the Mercury News.
The family of beavers in downtown Martinez continues to inspire people’s curiosity and compassion for their well-being.
“Beavers are not only a keystone species, they’re also a charismatic species, so people want to learn about them, photograph them, draw and paint them, celebrate them, and watch them. That is essentially what saved our beavers is people could actually see them,” says Heidi Perryman, founder and director of the nonprofit Worth A Dam.
She noted that prior to their efforts to educate about beavers’ essential role in saving and creating habitat, there had been a push to eradicate them — citing flood concerns — and instead the group managed to turn the perceptual tide to invigorate their population.
Visitors at Saturday’s ninth annual Beaver Festival — with this year’s theme “Ecosystem Engineers” — can see that a two-dimensional beaver has a new home, appearing on a mural depicting the Martinez marshlands, joined by frog, egret, turtle, and children painted leaning over a fence watching the beaver build his dam.
Shhh. This is my favorite part!
In 2011, after passers-by had inquired about the missing beaver, artist Mario Alfaro had painted him as part of a Main Street mural about Martinez life, but had been told by city personnel to remove it.
Initially, Alfaro’s mural, located on a bridge to the right of the Amtrak station entrance, was envisioned as a memorial to the kits that died last April, and as a tribute to their parents, who deemed the place unsafe and left, notes Perryman.
Fortuitously, a pair of beavers has since settled here, with their babies due anytime.
Perryman and Alfaro continue their advocacy and artistry, showing that humans and beavers can “peacefully, happily coexist,” Alfaro says.
Perryman’s grass roots activism recently caught the attention of Oregon’s Wetlands Conservancy which asked her to speak about how her outreach, and specifically the festival, has turned things around.
“She turned a problem into something valued in the community,” says Sara Vickerman, a member of the conservancy’s Beaver Lodge advisory group that has organized a traveling exhibit featuring 70 artists’ work with beavers as the common thread.
Calling the festival “attitude changing,” Vickerman adds, “it’s such a different way to reach people than just writing letters to your congressmen.”
Thank you Sara! Your praise means a lot. We’ve learned that people get engaged in multiple ways but the secret to saving beavers is the same as teaching your kindergartner to sort the laundry or set the table – letting people feel INVOLVED even if they do it wrong. And honestly, why write a letter to your congressman when he’s coming in PERSON to give the beaver festival an AWARD. And something else I’m very excited about and can’t yet mention. Let this demonstrate my eagerness.
Since 2011, Martinez resident and graphic designer Amelia Hunter has been creating the promotional brochures for the beaver festival, with the vision for this year’s festival, inspired by Perryman: “how the West was watered and how it can be done again.”
“Doing these brochures, I’ve gained a much greater appreciation for beavers,” says Hunter, also a watercolorist and member of the Martinez Arts Association. “It’s made me much more aware of how I impact my surroundings.”
Thanks Amelia! I’m so grateful for your talent that has helped us so many years. We are getting quite a collection of fantastic beaver images in retrospect. And thank you Mario and Jennifer! That was a perfect promotional article encouraging folks to come be curious about the beavers and see how they have been represented in the mural. Completely by Chance the project Sara Vickerman has been working on was in the news too. Seeing beavers in a new way is part of the challenge and I’m sure our influence was not unimportant in this project.
NEHALEM, Ore. – The Lower Nehalem Watershed Council is partnering with The Wetlands Conservancy to host a Beaver Art Exhibit and Sale, to be held in August of 2017 at the North County Recreation District, as part of a statewide recognition of Oregon’s official animal.
Project sponsors are seeking artwork of all kinds featuring the beaver and wetland habitat, including photographs, paintings, prints, cards, quilts, etc. Pieces can be in any style – realistic, abstract, whimsical, collage, etc. Three-dimensional pieces could be ceramic, wood, fiber art or other media. Artists can choose to sell or display their work. Interested artists should contact Sara Vickerman by email at svickerman@comcast.net or by phone at 503-936-4284 for more information or to register.
The Wetlands Conservancy’s Beaver Lodge advisory group has planned several art exhibits throughout the state featuring Northwest artists, roughly in conjunction with International Beaver Day, April 7, 2017. The planning is well underway, and will include exhibits at several locations large and small around the state in 2017, kicking off in February with a reception, exhibit and sale at Oregon State University’s LaSells-Stewart Center. Other exhibits and events will be held in Lake Oswego, Seaside and at the Oregon Zoo.
The beaver is woefully misunderstood and blamed for dam-building, flooding and munching on plants. In fact, Oregon beaver, nearly eradicated by trappers by 1900, create wetlands, spawning and rearing habitat for salmon and steelhead as well as for insects, birds and amphibians and create pools that keep water clean and moderate fluctuations in water flow. They are nature’s hydrologists.
We’re happy to help! We have some amazing beaver artists right here in Martinez that could lend a hand?
Need something beavery to do tomorrow morning? There’s still time to sign up for Joe Wheaton’s webinar on Beavers and Climate Change. Offered in combination with the Grand Canyon Trust and Utah State University, you know I’ll be there and it will be a dam good time!
They are the West’s most savvy water engineers. Here on the Colorado Plateau, ground zero for climate change, we humans have a lot to learn from these furry creatures.
What Can Beaver Teach Us About Adapting to Climate Change and Building More Resilient Systems?
FREE WEBINAR February 11, 2015 10 -11 a.m. MST
Utah State University fluvial geomorphologist Joe Wheaton studies rivers and the changes we humans – and beaver – bring to them. Joe and his colleagues observe, map, and document what happens when rivers are fortunate enough to have beaver, both here in the West and around the world.
In this 1-hour webinar, Joe will share what he and others are learning from beaver, explain where and how their dams interact with climate change, and take your questions.
Now it’s time for our awed thanks to our Martinez resident talent Amelia Hunter who has outdone herself yet again on the poster image for the 8th beaver festival. I don’t know about you but that might be the cutest thing I’ve ever seen. Note mom’s tail. This is the first painted image of a beaver getting a tail ride on the entire internet. I’m expecting it to inspire a Canadian coin design next year.
This fantastically educational tool was created by Olwen Hemmings for the kids program in the now-concluded Scottish Beaver trial. When I saw the photo I was in awe and wrote Simon Jones to know how it was made. He passed my email along to Olwen and she wrote back this morning.
Hi Heidi
The arch was a bit of a home-made job. I used 4inch thick upholstery foam (from Dunelm Mill, or the like) and doubled it up. Then cut the blocks using a fine toothed Japanese pull saw (a bread knife works just as well). Working out the angles for the blocks was a bit of a nightmare to be honest, and I ended up on the floor with a giant piece of dressmaking pattern paper, a long rule and a protractor trying to make a template!
Once the blocks were cut I sewed covers for them with a durable heavy cotton canvas (just some fabric I had lying around) and the pictures were put on with computer printable iron on transfer paper.
Glad you like them, they do go down well with the children who find them fun and I think they illustrate the ‘keystone arch’ concept very well.
Please feel free to give me a shout if you want to know any more.
Kind regards
Oly HemmingsEducation RangerScottish Beaver Trial
Of course the idea of such blocks at the beaver festival for kids to shape and play with loomed large immediately. As well as having blank ones that kids can paint! (Every cube has 6 sides you know…) And a tall arch that you walk under to enter the festival.
Oh and when I mentioned the possibility that they had a little help coming up with the idea, Simon didn’t deny it. This is the back page of our festival brochure.
And speaking of Amelia, yesterday we arranged for the beaver festival ad to run in the July Issue of Bay Crossings and our beautiful artist once again made it possible. Look for us at transit stations everywhere near the bay. Thanks Amelia!
I also heard from Ellis Myers, the editor of the Mt. Diablo Audubon newsletter, that he wanted an article and photo for the next issue of the Quail on why birders should come to the beaver festival! Perfect! Just the place to run this amazing new photo from Cheryl – thus confirming the coveted title of BBPEW (Best Beaver Photographer in the Entire World).
Yes, as it happens. Because we’re going to advertise the festival this year in the April-June issue of Bay Nature, which means we need the artwork in by February. Team beaver must have bought enough martini glasses to coax her into helping us again – (though more wouldn’t hurt!). We’ll also do a web ad on their site for July and hope it brings all the right sort of people!