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

Tag: Hung-a-lei-ti


Yesterday we drove again to the eastern side of the Sierras where we had accidentally found a series of beaver dams years ago. Turns out this fork of the carson river is central to the debate of whether beavers are native at higher elevations. Fish and Game says that all the beavers around Tahoe and Yosemite were ‘introduced’ in the 20’s. There are plenty who argue that this was actually a ‘reintroduction’ and point to trapping records and native lore to support it.

One tipping place of the debate seems to be the Washo tribe. These were the natives to the Lake Tahoe Region and were intimately connected with the eastern sierras. There is an argument that says that there couldn’t have been native beaver ‘because there’s no word for beaver in Washo’. However, our wikipedia friend whose looking into this recently found an online Washo database put together by the University of Chicago where the word for beaver is clearly listed.

c’imhélhel

It turns out that the very area in question, the sight of the fork of the Carson River where this debate is playing out, is the place where we stumbled upon beavers 8 years ago. We were drawn by the strange lunar landscape of the high desert, intrigued by the tribal lands of the Hung-a-lei-ti tribe, fascinated by the miles of sage and pinyon pine – suddenly on display after driving through a vista of fur trees. We followed the footsteps of Kit Carson and were ultimately directed to this very spot.

As you can see, the beavers here are clearly going about their business. They abandon the 5 year investment in their curving dams downstream and just started in on several new ones upstream. With  singular and furry focus they are entirely indifferent to the argument of whether or not they have a right to be there. Isn’t that wonderful?


Yesterday we went checking on the nearly-nevada beaver dams that we stumbled on by accident years ago. They are located near the Hung-a-Lel-ti reservation off 88. Last summer they were obviously not in residence and the dams were in disarray. This weekend they were in squeaking clean tip-top shape, and footprints were everywhere in the mud.

One of the things I love best about this habitat is that it allows for a series of small dams, I think we counted seven. Two of the most important are curved, like a hot tube. One is curved with its back to the current, the other faces and catches the current. Clearly some excellent designing.

As we were poking about looking for beaver tracks, another track caught my eye. Deep in soft mud, very clear and about as big as a softball with no sign of claws: Mountain Lion.

It was a little startling to see so near the dams. That shallow seasonal creek offers little protection for its engineers, and I could see clearly how beavers do have predators in the wild.

Still, it was a nice shiver to be miles from anywhere, crowded with willow thicket and pinyon pine, surrounded by distant snow capped peaks, and realize a mountain lion walked by exactly the same way as you.

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