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

Tag: Gary Bogue


I’m sure you heard something about the mountain lion shot in Berkeley near Chez Panisse at the end of August. It was slinking through the neighborhoods at 2 am and leaping over fences before a neighbor called the police. For a short period of time they hoped they could drive it out of the urban area into the park, but then gave up and killed it with a shotgun. It was a female, around 95 lbs, and surely the closest brush with a mountain lion that part of Berkeley has ever known.

Could something else have been done? Zara McDonald, of the Felidae Conservation Fund in Sausalito says no. Even if the police had used a tranquilizer gun they wouldn’t have known where to bring the big cat. Zara was the dynamic speaker at the most recent Valley of the Moon lecture. She’s involved with the Santa Cruz Moutain Lion project and co-founder of the Bay Area Puma Project that is in its early stages. It is estimated that, given the population of humans we have now around the state, our cat numbers are ‘at capacity’. We don’t have room for many more, although we clearly need to figure out how to take care of the ones we have.

Enter Jim Hale (remember him from the article in Bay Nature?). He wants to develop a mobile crisis unit that can respond the next time a Big Cat wanders where he shouldn’t be. He would like to train the local police, network with wildlife advocates and educate the public about the value of these animals. My dinner guest last night, Cindy Spring of Close to Home, wants to help, and Gary Bogue thinks it’s an idea worth getting behind and wants to be involved.

This is an idea in its infancy, but one that these people are passionate about. I know we’ll hear more about it soon. I thought I’d give you an initial glimpse so you can see how these things get started. Good people with good ideas getting together to make a difference.

I’m told that (to the untrained eye) sleek mountain lions are somewhat ‘sexier’ than lumpy beavers, so I have every faith they’ll get lots of help!


Yesterday I got only the second tail slap ever on video. I’m pretty happy about the capture. I think it was dad, who was down by the outlet of the flow device while the yearlings were wrestling about nearby. He saw me on the bridge and wanted to make sure our ELUSIVE kits didn’t wander into harms way. Cheryl isn’t sure his nose is pronounced enough for papa, but we both recognize the message “You kids quit horsing around and get off my lawn!”

If our kits turn up eventually healthy and stable, then I think it would demonstrate a very good thing — that the beavers have adjusted to their stay in Martinez by becoming more careful of their young, rather than less. It’s a good sign that they aren’t becoming habituated or taking our intrusions for granted, and that they still have all the skills to be wild beavers.

Click on the photo to view the footage:

From Tail Slap July 7, 2009

One other piece of news. A close beaver friend suggested yesterday that I might ask our beloved columnist and animal advocate Gary Bogue if he would be willing to donate time with himself for the silent auction! I thought the idea was crazy enough to work, so I wrote him and asked if he would consider it. He wrote back this morning that it works for him! So make sure you bring your checkbooks to the festival. Worth A Dam is offering veryyy rare treats.Thanks so much, Gary!

PS We were added to the Land’s Council Website this week. The are offering this fantastic list of reasons to keep beavers. Check it out!

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=wI5AjJd00cM]


Back when artist Kat Mulkey’s SOS woodpecker picture appeared in Gary Bogue’s column about the plight of the Rossmoor birds, I dropped her a note to thank her for her work and suggest she visit the Martinez Beavers. Maybe she’d be inspired? Kat came one evening in the spring and was met by myself and beaver regular LB for the full tour.  She was treated to an excellent beaver viewing as our yearlings wrestled in the water and paddled about. I could tell her interest had been awakened but couldn’t yet tell what might come of it.

This morning I see in Gary Bogue’s website that she has been hard at work. I love the piece, fantastic noses, small eyes and especially the paddling webbed foot under the water. (This was one of the surprises she remarked on as we sat on the bank). As always Gary, thanks for your kind attention to us, and Kat thanks for letting our beavers inspire you. Hey, maybe you’d like to come to the beaver festival? Display your work and let your skills be seen? Or possibly consider donating this work for the silent auction and making some beaver fan happy for years to come?

Just askin’….


Beaver Supporter and all around remarkable human,  Kelly Davidson Chou, of Mt. View Sanitation, has spaces open in her Saturday workshop on Bay Friendly Gardening. Kelly is an environmental education specialist, and volunteered to take on the pesky job of organizing our ephemeral ideas to meet the demands of the FWC grant application for interpretive signs at the dam. She worked at the festival and helps us keep an eye out for non Alhambra Creek beavers.

You can add your name to the list today, call her at 228-5635 x 19, or even just show up by 9:15 tomorrow.

Saturday, March 28, 9:30 am – 12:30 pm
Considering form and function before planting can save you time and
resources. This workshop provides an overview of design & maintenance
practices that will help you make smart choices at the nursery.

Help your garden. Help your pocket book. And help a friend of the beavers. Sounds like smart thinking to me.


In other environmental news Beaver supporter LK writes excitedly that she caught a glimpse of migrating butterflies

Did you see them? There is a butterfly migration happening!!  dunno what kind…noticed them yesterday and again today flying to the north over highway 4.  they seem so fragile to be making such a trip!

I don’t know what kind either, but that’s very exciting. I forwarded her email to Gary Bogue and hopefully will have some answers for you soon. In the mean time, don’t forget to look up.


Gary is probably still proudly enjoying his seven “It a gosling” cigars from this week’s hatching and launch from the roof at the Contra Costa Times.

Apparently the entire sage created quite the buzz. The leap off the roof produced such alarming video he took it off his website, even though it came with warnings and the preface that “all the goslings made it safe”.  I would advise the kinder, gentler photo essay rather than the video, or at least turn your sound wayyyyy down.

Anyway, mom and babies are doing fine apparently. And the friends of Walnut Creek are keeping a careful eye out. Thanks Gary! He will be the host of the Muir Earthday-Birthday this year, so you should really come by to thank him for all the good work he does.


Finally, my friend DS from Santa Cruz sends this story about a pair of golden eagles returning to the campus. It s very reaffirming to think about all the ways that nature reasserts herself in our little lives. Somewhere right now, nests are being built in unused bicycle helmets, strawberry pots, and the shovel of an old bulldozer. Compassionate, frusterated and wildly busy humans seem to just stop and let them have their space. They sometimes need a little nudge to do the right thing, but it is lovely to watch hearts soften. While nature renews itself, we humans have our own rebirth.

Maybe the first robin of spring was never truly worth reporting, but the first human awareness of a robin in spring is a story that never gets old.

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