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

Tag: Ian Timothy


Now before we get started today I have some housekeeping to attend to. Yesterday I received an email from Joe Eaton, a fast friend of the Martinez Beavers and the author of my favorite article ever on the death of the mother beaver for the Berkeley Daily Planet.  He said he stopped by to see the dams and thought they were abandoned (very high tide) and when he checked the website didn’t see any discussion of the Martinez Beavers since March! Were they okay?

I though that since a friendly faced didn’t know, you might not know either! You can always check for new sightings under the “sightings” tab on the menu bar on the top of the page. It will tell you what was seen, where, what time, and by whom. Just in case Joe is not the only one who doesn’t know! The sightings page is managed by Worth A Dam champion Lory Bruno whose friendly face you will see at the silent auction booth this summer. Here’s today’s update

May 7th – 6:15am – One beaver was seen above the primary dam and possibly a sighting of another beaver. Not sure if the same one came out but the second one was a bit smaller it seemed.. It came up to the lodge area and went underwater. Seems like there is something going on at the old lodge and there looked like new branches were on the lodge site, which was heavily mudded Saturday morning.CR

Next, our Kentucky Derby watching friends might find it interesting to know that the logo for the Derby was created by none other that the mother of our beloved Ian Timothy (creator of the beaver creek series).His father of course wrote and performed the music for the series. Here’s photographic proof of a very talented family!

You may remember that last week I wrote about the beavers at Silver Lake in CT which Councilman Thorpe described as “wreaking havoc” on the ecosystem. Of course I wrote him about the good that beaver do for the birds and fish and wildlife and he wrote back (in a manner I can only describe as ‘clipped‘) and said he knew all that but that this area was special because of a sewer line. Which, if true, you might have thought he’d mention to the media. Anyway, there’s a nice rebuttal to his alarms this morning

As the Record-Journal’s Richie Rathsack reported, there’s also evidence that the pond, larger now thanks to the beaver work, is more attractive to other wildlife. He also described dozens of trees along the shore with signs of beaver gnawing, as well as small trails left by beavers dragging trees through the woods to the water’s edge.

My strong suspicion is also that the proprietors of this so-called beaver hut are not paying their proper share of property taxes, and the beavers should probably be told that if there’s any vehicle involved that in Connecticut we tax you when you buy one, while you own one and once again when you sell one. Those trails the beavers are building should also be candidates for some sort of review and taxation, I’d wager.

It’s a clever bit of writing. Go read the whole thing.

Now let’s head even farther East for our final update. With beaver advocates chipping away at the resistance in the United Kingdom, check out this mornings BBC report on beavers in Wales!

It is thought that beavers, while common in medieval Wales, became extinct by the 16th Century.  But Ms Girardi said she believed the beavers remained “keystone species,” whose re-introduction would increase biodiversity.

On a final note it’s Monday so if you’re very, very good you can watch this video from Peter Smith at the Wildwood Trust in England. A very stalwart, enthusiastic member of the Save the Free Beavers of the River Tay died two weeks ago, Mike Johnston. So Peter very nobly made sure that one of these kits was named after him. I guess its theoretically possibly you might see something cuter in your entire lifetime, but it surely isn’t likely! Enjoy!


Draut Park beaver talks continue

Members of the St. Matthews city parks committee plan to meet this month with St. Xavier High School student Ian Timothy to further discuss strategies for dealing with beavers in Draut Park, which also serves as a water retention area for flood control.

The dam is back, and councilman Rick Tonini said it, too, will be cleared away. “I understand your love of beavers,” Tonini said. “But it’s not a beaver park.”

Okay, the Courier-Journal has given very specific instructions that they are not to be quoted in any way unless dollars change hands, but I must risk the full wrath of Kentucky copyright law to share with you councilman Tonini’s breathtaking explanation of the issues, in which he considers civic hydrology, cultural demand, and agrarian richness and boils it all down to the Hallmark-worthy greeting, ‘Son, its not a beaver park”.

Wait, does this mean that the City of St. Matthews is going to build a designated ‘Beaver Park”?

In the mean time the councilman should know that every park with trees and water is potentially a “Beaver Park”.  Since the dam is back again two months later and you’re going to use manpower hours and the bulldozer again to rip it out, I have to ask is it a “Department-of-Public-Works-Overtime Park“? Is it a “pay-to-relocate-beavers-every-12-months park“? Or maybe a “Generatingbad-press-for-the-city park”?

The article (which you really must go read in its entirety) describes the AWARD WINNING Ian  who has lobbied long and hard for a flow device (in his enviable earnest and snark-free manner), talked about sand- painting trees, and pledged support including this lovely sentence:

The Worth A Dam group in California would match the city’s contribution to the $500 cost of a “deceiver” structure, Ian said.

Gosh, those meddling Worth A Dam folks are everywhere! Now technically, we are generally trying to keep the scholarship in California but this is IAN we’re talking about and there’s no question its the best place for it.

At the moment there are two comments for this story, one from me and one from Sharon Brown of Beavers Wetlands and Wildlife.Why don’t you go leave one too?

Of course I sent a letter to the editor – since it has not yet been printed I have no qualms about quoting it.

By now the city of St. Matthews easily has enough public support to get 25 young people working to help wire wrap or sand paint trees in Draut park by this time tomorrow. The city already has matching funds pledged for a culvert protecting flow device. It has been provided an award-winning DVD to teach them how to do this work themselves, and the city is just 15 hours away from the top experts in the country if it wants to bring help in to do it for them.

Surely Mr. Tonini understands that any park with water and trees is potentially a ‘beaver park’? Even if the city could get rid of these beavers, with adequate habitat you can be certain that more will move in to take their place. Why not solve the problem for the long term, and use our matching funds to install a flow device?

At this point the notion of beavers at Draut park is looking pretty IANevitable.

And  speaking of our own ‘beaver park’ this morning, there were  some very lovely looking dams, a million swallows, several landing mallards and two happily munching beavers.


Our young stop-motion films and beaver hero went to the city council meeting at St. Matthews last night about the beavers in Draut park. It sounds like it went excellently, here’s his summary of the evening.

Update!

The council meeting went great. I got up and talked for about 15 minutes, they asked quite a few questions, and told me how beavers destroy trees. One of the councilmen is in charge of the parks, and another was a biologist and they were very interested in it, the parks guy is going to watch Mike’s DVD and I am going to be meeting with him in a couple weeks at the park and we are going to figure out what we are going to do, he was very open to the idea of a flow device, (if we even need one).

I’ll let you know if anything else happens, but overall I think meeting was very successful. All of the council members, (except the above mentioned) said I did a good job with the presentation.

Great work Ian! We are rooting for you! Good for Mike for donating a DVD! And great work beaver protection S.W.A.T. team that appeared from everywhere to fan out over roof tops and behind parked cars until we had them surrounded! Please keep us posted. Since they are trying to protect a culvert, he better start the DVD here….

The next follow up isn’t nearly as cheerful. Remember the beaver found in the slurry pitt in Devon that was assumed to be the third ‘missing beaver’ from Derek Gow’s farm? Well, uh guess what? It isn’t Igor!

George Hyde, operations manager at Dartmoor Zoo, which took in the creature, said they were “99 per cent” certain that this is a different beaver.

“The male that got away was 35 kilos,” he said. “He was known for being a big beaver.  “This one is only about 15 or 20 kilos. At an educated guess he’s about two or three years old. It’s a real mystery where he’s come from.”

Ooh! Ooh! I know! Call on me! Looks like there’s a beaver underground in the UK! Knowing that the population is too superstitious to believe the science and too paranoid to accept the change required to protect their creeks and streams, Castor Fiber has taken matters into their own hands – er – paws and started reproducing on their own! And its been happening for two or three years already! (Apparently doing it on your own is so much easier than having a team of scientists looking over your shoulder every minute ruining the mood!)

This particular beaver is a youngster so it’s fairly reasonable to believe that mum and dad are not too far away,” said Mr Hyde.

“The fact he was found in a farmyard suggests he was exploring and looking for territory of his own.”

Yeah, about that…Well the British country side wasted no time in abandoning their stiff upper lips to enjoy a good panic. Beavers breeding in the wild for the first time in 400 years! Giant rodents rampant on the countryside! Snakes on a plane! Jeremy Goodwin from the Free Tay beaver group summarized it dryly and made me snork coffee yesterday morning, saying: “Zombie beavers! They are coming to eat children’s brains.”

You’re thinking we exaggerate? Just check out this from This is Cornwall yesterday!

Beavers, for example, damage river banks and trees, alter water courses and eat, or at least hinder, wild salmon.

Why bother with the facts when it will sound so true to so many readers? I am reminded of this famous introduction 7 years ago.


St. Matthews gains attention over beavers in Draut Park

UPDATE: The courier Journal has very politely invited me to pay them for the privilege of quoting their article, which seems odd considering they were allowed to quote me for free. However, since I am burdened with a massive super-ego I will comply by removing the quotes and summarizing the content in red. Those of you that are highly motivated to read their sylvan prose may click on the link yourself.

The article describes young Ian Timothy and his concern about beavers at Arthur K Draut Park where the lodge was recently bulldozed. It introduces readers to Ian the naturalist and explains his award winning films. Then says he emailed a ” beaver protection activist” in California about the situation.

Nice invitation to the story and into Ian’s award-winning films! Hmm, what kind of intro does Worth A Dam get?  Beaver protection activist? (People for the Ethical Treatment of Beavers?) I guess I’ve been called worse.  I really see myself as more of a educator actually…or missionary….maybe a free-range guerrilla missionary educator with a blog?

The article describes how I, said beaver protection activist, sent Ian’s letter to all our beaver friends and the city desk was flooded with emails from as far away as New Zealand. In an interview with the reporter I explained that beaver was well known by us. (Gosh, do you think I have to pay to quote them quoting me?)

I guess the “BAT SIGNAL” really worked this time. The emails from around the world caused a bit of a stir apparently. Not sure why a mortified councilman would forward his stack of accusations to the press, but I certainly wish it happened all the time. I guess he was saying that he had never killed beavers and all those crazy people from PET-B were being mean to him.

To which I can only say: BOO!

The councilman is quoted as being shocked that beavers chew trees and Ian is quoted describing the function of coppice cutting. Guess which one sounds more informed?

Go Ian Go! What excellent phrasing and communication! Teaching folks to see the ‘forest’ for the ‘trees’ is a huge step in beaver advocacy!  The fact that this photo ran in the article means that your message definitely sank in.

Ian says he wants to help the council understand about flow devices, and the council says we have to examine costs.

Absolutely councilman Tonini. Consider the cost of beaver control measures. Add up manpower hours and fuel costs for ripping out the dams a few times a year, planting  a few trees, and while you’re at it figure in your own time you spent talking to the media about this and answering emails. Then compare it to the cost of installing a flow device for which we here at “PET-B” have already offered to match your costs with a scholarship. Sit down and do the math  and let me know what you come up with.

Ian was interviewed on Agents of Change last week and has been involved in several film festivals.

Just in case we have some new visitors from the article, go here to listen to the amazing interview. Ian did an excellent job, and we are enormously proud of his first foray into the beaver trenches! Thank you Martha for writing such a compassionate, thorough piece, and thank you Karen and Joel for producing such a creative and  heroic citizen of the natural world.

And as for our hero, we can only say, Ian, you are truly Worth A Dam!




Yesterday’s fieldtrip was the kind of absorbing  delightful fun such that it is only after you have had it you realize how truly exhausted you are. Both of Alhambra Creeks protectors were there as Igor ditched the salmon conference for the morning and came to assist. We took everyone out for a gratitude lunch at Lemon Grass Bistro afterwards and there was lots to be grateful! There were bright shiny faces, enchanting questions, delightful observations and new discoveries. I talked to small groups at a time about the Martinez beaver story and how the ‘special pipe’ we installed allowed the beavers to stay and ‘make a neighborhood’.

But the best part was when I asked the children to help us by becoming ‘junior beaver scientists’ and helping research an important beaver question.  Each child drew a question out of the basket – such as ‘how do beavers help fish?’ or ‘how do beavers help frogs?’ and their job was to find the two OTHER children with the same question and figure out the answer. Then we asked all our research teams to share results so everyone else could learn from them. Sitting back and hearing 76 8-year-olds explain to me how beavers make habitat for fish or birds or turtles was the very best part of the day and I highly recommend it!

Rumor is that Leonard and Lois Houston of the Beaver Advocacy Committee might come to town today to see the dams, so we’ll keep an eye out!

Meanwhile I thought I’d let you know that next week the International Bird Rescue group in Cordelia is having their volunteer training and needs good people like YOU to wash ducks coated in oil or  raise baby chicks. Our own VP Cheryl Reynolds is volunteer coordinator and would love to have you aboard. Here’s the information:

International Bird Rescue Volunteer Orientation

Do you love helping wildlife? Then come be a part of our dedicated team and learn how you can help. International Bird Rescue is a non-profit wildlife hospital for injured and orphaned aquatic birds. Volunteers are needed to help in our wildlife hospital, transportation of wildlife and facilities support.

International Bird Rescue has been saving seabirds and other aquatic birds around the world since 1971. Bird Rescue cares for over 5,000 birds every year at its two bird rescue centers.

Our upcoming orientation is: Sat Apr 14, 2012, 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM
For more information please visit our website at or email us.    Registration appreciated

One final note is that tomorrow’s very special Easter Sunday Podcast will feature a certain beloved young stop-motion filmmaker from Kentucky. This year it seems like everyone wants to talk to Ian, but only on Martinezbeavers.org will you learn the startling truth about how this

started out as this:

I knew I forgot something! Today is International Beaver Day! How will you celebrate?

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