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

Tag: CT



A beaver swims in a pond between Beaver Pond in Meriden and Silver Lake in Berlin Wednesday afternoon, Aporil 25, 2012. Beavers have built dams in the area and caused flooding into surrounding woodland areas. The pond has risen nearly five feet. (Christopher Zajac / Record-Journal)


Beavers fell trees, ‘raise havoc’ near Meriden’s Silver Lake

The beavers are back — with a vengeance. They’ve expanded Little Silver Lake — which is on the Meriden-Berlin line, across the train tracks from Silver Lake — to about four times its previous size, and not everybody is happy about it.

City Councilor Trevor Thorpe. “Quite honestly, (beavers) are not the cuddly, nice creatures cartoons make them out to be,” Thorpe said. “They are actually quite destructive. They’ve raised havoc down here. They have been down here for well over a year now.”

Listen to Trevor! Beavers aren’t cuddly. They’re destructive. They’re like furry organic bulldozers – well not like bulldozers because bulldozers mean development and parking lots and money for the city – and beavers don’t bring money. They’re WORSE than bulldozers. They’re like wrecking balls! Forest fires! Tornadoes!

Got that?

After a walk across a large field and down a trail scarred with ATV tracks, Thorpe pointed out the beaver den, a large hut offshore made of wood and mud. A great blue heron perched atop the hut for a few minutes before flying off in the direction of Silver Lake.

Nearby, a beaver swam in and out of the small trees where the shore used to be. It slapped its tail on the water a couple of times before retreating back to the hut.

From where the train tracks split Silver Lake and Little Silver Lake, the small side appears to have a higher water level, which Thorpe said is unusual. It is unclear if beavers are clogging the culvert or if debris is in the way.

While beavers may be causing headaches for some humans, wildlife is taking full advantage of the larger pond.

A swan sat on a nest at what used to be the edge of the swamp. Huge trees near the edge of the trail stand dying, their bases completely under water.

Gosh that sounds destructive! Swans and blue herons and beavers! I bet there’s otters and turtles and frogs too! Those rotten beavers and their wicked wetland ways! Thank goodness Trevor  came on the scene just in time! No telling what kind of wildlife riffraff might have moved in!

Is it me or do you get the feeling this reporter was touring the area, struggling to keep a straight face, and all the while thinking: are you insane? Destructive? Look at everything the beavers created! This pond is a Connecticut Oasis!

It’s a nice article and given last Saturdays reminder from Massachusetts that flooded trees in beaver bonds create great blue heron rookeries, it couldn’t be better timed. I think some folks get letters.

Oh and here’s a video of the not-at- all-cuddly-villain in question in case you’re looking for them on the post office wall.

(I actually hate this video because these folks apparently found the orphan, took him for a photo shoot and then dumped him about a mile from where he got lost, but it IS remarkable footage. And the not-at-all-cuddly thing is SO cute that I apparently cannot watch more than 25 seconds without bursting into protective tears!
Good luck!


Yesterday’s Courant paper out of Connecticut sports this headline

Wethersfield Evicting Beavers From Beaver Brook

The town is evicting some beavers from Beaver Brook.  In the last few weeks, a state-authorized “nuisance beaver” trapper has captured three adult beavers in the brook’s swamplands off Spring Street, Town Engineer Michael Turner said.

There may be more of the creatures to be trapped and removed, he said.It’s not clear how many beavers have been living in the section of the brook across from the town skating pond on Spring Street.

Let this be a warning to you in CT that when you receive your eviction or foreclosure notice, the nutmeg state may already have your ‘final destination’ in mind! Certainly that was the case for these ‘nuisance’ beavers which is what a city without problem-solving skills calls a problem.

Obviously Wethersfield, which is only an hour away from Beaver Solutions in MA and two hours away from Skip Lisle in VT, couldn’t possibly solve the beaver puzzle in any other way except by trapping. It’s not as if Connecticut has its own former trapper who is now a highly respected installer of flow devices himself (Skip Hilliker) or has citizens who care about the beavers and would take action on their behalf.

At a town council meeting Jan. 3, resident Barbara Ruhe spoke about the beavers, telling residents the creatures were “quite something to see.” She urged people to go see them and take children before the beavers are evicted or meet an untimely end because “we can’t live with them.”

You most certainly CAN live with them, Wethersfield. And you should. You are surrounded by solutions and we’d be happy to find you more. Aside from the needless repeat pouring of taxpayer dollars on a trapping fix that will need to be repeated again and again, there are very good reasons to live with beavers, including a raised water table, more fish, more birds and more wildlife – not to mention what will happen if you have a few volunteers lead fieldtrips down to the beaver dam.

I went looking through your town minutes for the painstakingly decision you made to solve a problem with action rather than with thought, but there wasn’t even a mention of it in this month’s meetings or the last. Apparently the proposal to kill some beavers might make public comment, but it doesn’t even require a motion to actuate.

I hope someone from Wethersfield watches this  video. It might change things a bit


OLD SAYBROOK, Conn. (WTNH) – Several homes and businesses in Old Saybrook are flooded with more than four feet of water after the removal of a beaver dam.

According to the Old Saybrook Fire Department, many homes along the intersection of Route 1 and Route 154 are flooded.The state’s Department of Transportation partially removed the dam because of a clogged culvert.

Yes you heard it here first, REMOVAL of a beaver dam  can cause flooding. Who knew? Apparently not the Deparment of Transportation (DOT) folks who ripped debris outta that culvert.  They had no idea all those homes would be in four feet of water in a few hours. Now they’re saying that there must have been OTHER culverts blocked too! But who could POSSIBLY have guessed that? since beavers never build more than one dam in an area!

Except that they do. And DOT spends enough time destroying beavers and their dams to have a wing named after it so they should have known better. And call me suspicious but I don’t believe they would have ever done this next to a wealthy neighborhood or a powerplant. Well, the waters gone now anyway. And the beavers too probably. Maybe the folks in CT will connect the DOTs and hold them accountable for incredibly bad planning, but my guess is that the problem will be blamed on beavers and they’ll just promise to kill more next time.

Am I the only one who wonders where this is where  the term ‘dotty‘ comes from?

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