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

Tag: Bay Nature


After yesterday’s downer It’s a relief to remember our rule of “Only good news on Sundays”. And plenty of good news! Starting with Tuedsday’s meeting at the PRMCC where we will officially ask permission for the beaver festival in Susan Park. (Don’t even make me laugh thinking they could say no.)  The very first time I presented to them they were a tough crowd, now they love us, so I’m not worried. (Much)

Then Saturday is the huge John Muir Birth Day Earth Day event. And that is always a fantastic day for beavers and their supporters. This year we are letting kids illustrate three of our banner lamp post flags for the festival. We cordoned sections off for them to color in, and  collected wildlife buttons leftover from  our Mark Poulin activity a few years back in a container for them draw at random as payment and inspiration. 

There are always plenty of volunteer artists at our booth, and poor Leslie and our stalwart volunteers usually work their eager beaver tails off.

You should plan on being there, especially because there will be over 50 environmental booths and it’s a fantastic way to support the planet and celebrate the green spots in our community, This year’s conservation award winners are sure to impress an our good friends at Safari West are among them. So make plans to be there and stop by and say hi!.

We’ll be right by the creek as usual.

Tory MP Nigel Evans furious after Royal Mail shuns Brexit to release stamps with endangered animals instead

A final burst of good news comes from our good friends in the UK where instead of issuing a nasty Brexit stamp like the post office was pressured to they issued a series of new endangered species stamps. And guess who is number one?

Aren’t those lovely? I can’t wait to inherit some from Jon’s willing friends or family.


And finally we have another donation to the silent auction. Which was very timely because it coincides with the 2nd quarter issue of Bay Nature describing it’s creation. It is the current edition of “Nature in the city map” by author Mary Ellen Hannibal and others featuring amazing illustrations by Jane Kim showing the wild wonders of San Francisco.

Together, the five maps are meant to encourage city dwellers to see nature as something that can be found right in their neighborhoods,

I don’t know about you but after I’ve learned what to look for I’m tempted to frame my copy and hang it on the wall. It’s that beautiful.


So here’s the scoop on Ranger Rick. I heard yesterday from Brock Dolman of the OAEC and he said that they were contacted for a short piece about beavers and drought in California. I also heard from Suzi Eszterhas that our beaver article won’t be until next summer. So yes, beavers will be in RR next month, but only a little story and not our big 8-page story, which will still come next June or July.

Yesterday Rickipedia included me in an email discussion he is having with the authors of this book who are consulting him about how to research the historic prevalence of beaver in the Santa Cruz River.

UA-PressWebbBetancourtJohnsonTurner-1

Seems there aren’t many remains there either. And we’re surprised that beaver bones didn’t survive in waterways 170 years after being burned and discarded? How many fish bones did the archeologists find? Or otter bones?

Speaking of otters, there’s a really wonderful piece in the October issue of Bay Nature that features our friends at the River Otter Ecology Project and their work to document population dynamics.

After Decades Away, River Otters Make a Triumphant Return to the Bay Area

We’re peering down into a ravine carved out by Lagunitas Creek, looking for North American river otters. According to official California Department of Fish and Wildlife records, last updated in 1995, we are officially fools; there are no otters anywhere near here. They are “non-occurring,” wiped out from most of the Bay Area long ago by trapping, pollution, lack of prey, loss of habitat—any and all of the difficulties that wild animals contend with in urban areas.

But according to the data collected in the last four years by Megan Isadore and her corps of citizen otter spotters, these little fish-eating predators are all over the place, particularly here in Marin County. On the website of her small nonprofit River Otter Ecology Project, the reports of sightings pour in, from anglers and dog-walkers and nature lovers and amazed suburbanites: Hey, I just saw an otter! As of 2016, ROEP has catalogued more than 1,730 sightings and added to that tally close to 5,000 camera-trap videos and photos and roughly 1,300 samples of otter scat.

The fact that otters are back in the Bay Area of their own accord without any reintroduction program to help them looks like a reason to declare victory. It seems to be proof that cleaning up watersheds makes a difference, that restoration works, that species will bounce back if we only push hard enough. “Their recovery in the Bay Area is, I believe, the result of conservation and restoration activities: the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, all these things we

ROEP now counts otters in two ways. Anyone can report an otter sighting online by providing enough details to rule out mistakes. But that only tells you where otters are. In order to get other dimensions of information—what they’re doing, what their niche might be—the group also trains and sends out volunteers who visit specific field sites weekly throughout the summer and early fall, when mothers have brought their new pups out from their dens and most other otters tend to stay put in their territories. Using an app designed to capture otter data, volunteers record the locations of signs (latrines, paw prints, tail drag marks, slides, dens), maintain motion-activated camera traps, and review the footage to document family life and behavior. (The cameras have caught other creatures too: bobcats, a badger, a merlin, baby foxes, and once a woman skinny-dipping.)

Isadore sees otters as a way in to understanding relationships between other things—how otter prey like the endangered coho rise and fall, whether local improvements in water quality outweigh the new pressures of climate change for otters. meganAs an animal that relies on land and water, fish and fowl, it’s a species that can tie a lot together.

That’s how it works, Isadore says later: Efforts have ripples and consequences that you never anticipate. By showing a high-school student a video, you might awaken an interest in art and environment. By cleaning up a watershed, you just might find yourself surrounded by otters. “I want people to understand we have the ability to work for positive effects, as well as [have] the negative effects,” she says. “I want people to believe we have the ability to change things. That’s what I’m constantly trying to get across.”

Great work team Megan! We really didn’t realize otters were missing because we always saw them on our canoe trips (in Mendocino county) or at Jon’s work (On the Delta). This is really an outstanding and well-written article to promote your remarkable work and be inspirational to others who want to start citizen science of their own. We’re proud to say we knew you when. This is great promotion for ROEP and otters, and should help drive attention (and funding) your way. I personally am thrilled that otters can serve as the ambassadors to our creeks systems and get folks thinking of water health.

I may have ulterior motives.

(Mind you…the Martinez Beavers only merited a single page BN article after being missing from the entire bay area for 150 years and never got mentioned again even though we  did publish ground-breaking research on historic prevalence and start a festival that has 2000 attendees, and win the John Muir Conservation education award (a year after you), complete a mural and get added to the congressional record, but never mind.)

I’m not jealous.  Why do you ask?



Jack Laws
Speaking of people drawing beaver teeth inaccurately – guess what I just noticed! The amazing see it and draw it in nature John Muir Laws, who sketched our beavers lo these many years ago, did a portrait last month on how to tell beavers and otters apart. This was in the July – September issue. And it took me a while to even recognize what I was seeing.

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Can you say chip monk? Or bear with beaver teeth? How could such a talented man forget everything he learned here in Martinez? He needs a dose of beaver watching STAT! I’m writing a letter. You see for yourself whether this portrait he did in person isn’t more accurate.


JWSPust learned that our tree-planting Watershed Steward Interns will be helping with the festival by distributing our buttons to exhibitors, explaining the activity, and generally helping kids to make sure they all know what to do. I’m so excited! California Conservation Core at the Beaver Festival! The city may have pulled up their trees, but they’ve done nothing to remove  their support!
Capture1The Bay Area Family Calendar is the hot spot for finding schools, camps and what to do events in the summer. I registered our beaver festival and the director wrote me back offering to feature the event if we hosted a link on our website. Even though this site doesn’t host any ads, or get any funds from promotion, that seemed like a great trade for a time limited event, so check it out. We’re listed on the main page, third one down!

CaptureCaptureThe trade is they get a logo and link on our festival page, and maybe you can click on it here and show that we’re worth trading with. This along with our Bay Nature Ad and our Watchable wildlife listing should help get the non-locals curious. Then I’m hoping for a nice article in the Gazette and the Contra Costa Times again….fingers crossed our event will be elbow room only!

Bay Area Family Calendar Logo


Our ad in Bay Nature’s August issue just came out. We’re nicely placed in the upper right hand corner of page 17. Thanks Bay Nature for promoting our beavers! And Amelia for the awesome artwork.

Bay Nature 2014And just in case the nature crowd misses the ad in BN, check out the article in this month’s newsletter for the Mt. Diablo Audubon. The editor kindly allotted me 300 word to convince bird lovers to come to a beaver festival. I am very proud of this particular work. In addition to being one of the most carefully crafted and pithy things I think I ever wrote, it is also exactly 300 words.

Except for the last sentence about MDAS having a booth. Ellis added that.QuailThere’s a new chapter of meet the characters for the Beaver Believers film, and it’s not me, but it should be someone you know. In case you don’t recognize her right away, this is the beaver magician Mary O’brien who attended our festival in 2010. She has, along the way inspired me, delighted me, encouraged me, exasperated me and terrified me. Not necessarily in that order.

Recognize her now? This should help…

mary
Checking out the tiles – Mary O’brien

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