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

Tag: Frisky Beaver wine


Sarah Koenigsberg and her beaver film are in Canada. Here film is screening at the Banff Mountain Festival. In the meantime she is busy stocking up supplies to calm her frazzled nerves. This photo smiled at me from FB. Look, she found our much admired wine “Frisy Beaver”. I still want them to donate to the festival.

I like “beaver riot” on her shirt too. That’s clever. There may be an homage in our future!

Meanwhile the film will go next to Calgary where it will debut the night before our election {GO VOTE} in the science building of the University of Calgary campus.

The Beaver Believers, U of C Film Screening

Monday, November 5, 2018 from 5:00 PM to 6:30 PM (MST)Calgary, Alberta

Join director Sarah Koenigsberg for a private screening of her new film “The Beaver Believers”, a film about “passion and perserverence in an era of climate change”.  Filmed in 8 western US states, Mexico, and Canada, this film focuses on the restoration and management of the North American beaver in watersheds of the American West.  

This event is being sponsored by The Miistakis Institute (www.rockies.ca) and the Alberta Riparian Habitat Management Society (Cows and Fish) (www.cowsandfish.org). 

So many of our friends together in one place! Hurray! I knew C&F would want to be part of a screening. I’m so glad its coming together so nicely in this “year of the beaver”.

Speaking of which, I heard from Ben Goldfarb that he liked he film and Robin pointed out that he had uploaded one of his own about some beaver relocation he was part of in Washington. Enjoy.

Now I’m off to the sierras for little late autumn. We missed the best showing but wish us a little color anyway.

HOPE VALLEY CALIFORNIA

Delicious autumn! My very soul is wedded to it,
and if I were a bird I would fly about the earth
seeking the successive autumns.”

George Eliot


Beavers take over SPVP

Dr. Heidi Perryman will be at San Pedro Valley County Park Visitor Center on Saturday, June 6, at 6 p.m., for a talk she likes to call “Ecosystem Engineers in Martinez: understanding how and why to coexist with urban beavers.”

Beavers descended on Martinez in 2007, and by October of that year they had built a dam that the City Council determined could be a flooding hazard; the little dam builders were slated for extermination. Did the people of Martinez sit on their hands on this one? Come to the Visitor Center and find out about the story of the beavers in this Bay Area town.

Wow great start! So far I’m really impressed with this article that calls me Dr. and puts the story in context, making sure to give credit to the hundreds of concerned residents who made the difference! I’m sure it continues on in this wonderful vein, right?

Perryman is the president of “Give a Dam“, the citizens group that fought for the beavers. She is a child psychologist who’s probably naturally attracted to the problems of little creatures and says that she is used to speaking to a mixed age group; so bring your older children with you–probably age 10 and above. Dr. Perryman is part of the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, where she helps investigate and implement social action for ecological health. She was also on the committee that first responded for action for the beavers after meeting with the city council back in 2007, and which eventually gave rise to the Martinez beavers’ website.

facepalm

ARRRRRRRRRG! What a paragraph. Easily and verifiably wrong in so may ways. Why does the world seems so quick to change our name? When I contacted them about the press release the author explained she saw on the OAEC website this sentence:

In 2012, Perryman, Lanman and Brock Dolman from the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center’s Water Institute wrote their first paper reviewing the evidence for beavers in the Sierra Nevadas.

To wish I can only say, sheesh. Don’t colonize me with those your dangling participles! Rick and I were not from the OAEC (and by the way there was another author listed too). And as for the name of our ACTUAL organization – we aren’t stupid in Martinez. We know our city will NEVER give a dam.  I have Ann Cameron Siegal to thank for this apt musical response.

On the “Worth a Dam” internet location you can investigate more about this industrious engineer: just how it contributes to the health of any area in surprising ways, why beavers are valuable to all of us, and where their original distribution was in California before these large rodents were devastated by the fur trade and habitat loss.

It’s a nice article and should bring a good turnout, which is good because Pacifica will have beavers of its own soon enough. And I can take a few moments to correct the misunderstandings.  Of course I sent copies to the mayor last night, so he can see their publicity in action. Wish me luck. I HAVE to practice today. I’ve spent too much time lately mooning of the images of the Napa kits and wondering when ours will show. And yesterday I had an useful burst of beaver begging for the silent auction, where I found THIS wine label that made me laugh as hard as I can remember doing in a long while. I sure hope they donate.

189638_label

 

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