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

Tag: Maryland


The city of Salisbury Maryland is shocked to learn that a beaver will chew a tree to survive in the winter. Shocked I tell you! They are furthermore shocked to learn that a beaver, who has built a lodge, and chewed many trees, is probably not acting alone but with family members, possibly many family members. They are stunned to learn that Maryland’s Department of Natural Resources has said they cannot livetrap the beaver and dump it in someone else’s creek instead.

They’ve even floated the idea of taking it to the local zoo.

Gone is the wait-and-see approach adopted by city officials when the beaver showed up. All options are on the table, Mayor Jim Ireton said, emphasizing that the absolute last among them is euthanizing the creatures.  “Nobody wants to kill a beaver,” he said, “and nobody wants a tree to fall down.”

It could join its brethren at the Salisbury Zoo, some have suggested. But that would entail testing it for rabies first and making sure the existing beaver habitat could support a third animal, Ireton said.

Isn’t Maryland supposed to be one of our founding fathers or something? Wasn’t it like the 7th state to ratify the constitution and hugely important in the beaver trade? And wasn’t Maryland ranked as the 5th greenest state in the nation a few years back by Forbes magazine?  What on earth is wrong with them?

Mayor Jim Ireton said. “Nobody wants to kill a beaver,” he said, “and nobody wants a tree to fall down.”

And those are your two choices? Death of beavers or death of trees? Do you also make your residents pick between getting wet when they walk outside in May and having a drought? Between sitting by the fire and bursting into flames? Between having electricity in homes and letting crawling infants stick their fingers in power outlets? You do know there are actual ‘solutions’ for these problems right? Including protecting trees from beavers?

For its part, the Humane Society of the United States recommends a handful of ways to keep beavers at bay, including fencing off the trees or wrapping the lower 3 feet of the trunk in galvanized wire. “Some success” has been seen with coating the lower trunk in a mixture of exterior latex paint and coarse mason’s sand, according to its website.

What’s up with “some success” HSUS? Could you be a little more specific? Like, it has to be reapplied every two years and it doesn’t work at all if you do it wrong? (I’m thinking they get a letter.) For the record, its worked in Martinez. And it works for about two years at a time.

A park visitor said last week that he too knew at once that the fallen trees were the work of a beaver. But Adrion Parks, who lives in Princess Anne, said he doesn’t think the animal should have to pay with its life.

“He’s just doing what he knows how to do,” said Parks, 18.

FYI Salisbury. Beavers don’t chew trees because its a bad habit they picked up like smoking or biting their fingernails. They don’t chew trees because they got in with the wrong crowd or weren’t taught right by their parents. They chew trees because they are herbivores and they need to EAT and wear down their constantly growing teeth. So solving this problem now, learning how to manage beaver chewing, since beavers will always be getting ready for the winter freeze about this time and trying to take a bunch of trees into their food cache about now, spending 5 minutes to learn what to do and investing 10 dollars from the hardy city funds is probably a good use of your time.

Any city smarter than a beaver can keep a beaver. And keep a beaver from eating its trees.




Listen my children and understand
The beavers lost in Maryland
Bill Greene of Olde Stage Knolls remembers
The wetland built in past Decembers
Now are drained and barren land…

(apologies to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)

Here’s a familiar story out of Bowie, Maryland with an exciting new twist. Seems home owner Bill Greene is pursuing legal action over his missing beavers after the Home Owner’s Association turned his “wetland” into a “dryland”.

Bill Greene used to enjoy the tranquility of the pond that once backed up to his and about 20 other houses in the Olde Stage Knolls neighborhood in Bowie.The pond, which was there before the housing development was built more than 18 years ago, was made by a beaver dam, said Greene and his neighbor, Jeanette Rodkey. But the beavers and the dam were removed and the pond consequently drained in March at the request the Olde Stage Homeowners Association, HOA president David Perroto said.

So Mr. Greene notified the Maryland Department of the Environment who came out and inspected the drained pond and dam-age. Turns out the MDE was very interested to learn that the HOA never obtained any permits for the work or the destruction of the beavers.

“I’m not a tree-hugger or something, but it really bothers me that this area was destroyed,” Greene said. “I think it’s important that people understand that even that five acres behind your home is wetlands and it’s protected.”

Ahhh, way to go, Bill! Even in your non-tree-hugging capacity, you tell em! It’s about time people realized that there are consequences for removing beavers, including destroying wetlands. Disabling valuable habitat is an expensive act that should never be undertaken lightly. Any environmental lawyers reading this? Pay attention. I think this could set a precedent. Right now if you want to mess with wetland in California, F&G makes you create some other wetland as compensation. How about if every time a beaver dam were destroyed the habitat had to be replaced somewhere else at the property owner’s expense?

Might slow down the “slash and burn” a bit.

Violations included work done on the site without authorization by MDE and the removal of sediment leading to water pollution.

Now we’re talking. Let’s discuss what is released when a dam is destroyed? And by extension what beaver dams hold back for us? Maybe the property owner who leaves one on his land should get a tax credit, because of all the good he’s doing for the water and the environment?

The case has been forwarded to the Maryland Attorney General’s Office by MDE for possible enforcement action, said MDE spokesman Jay Apperson, who declined to comment further on the specific case because it remains under review.The association’s liability insurance is paying for the cost of legal representation in the case and would cover any fines the state might assess, he said.The home owner’s association’s former management company, D.H. Bader Management Services, contracted with ABC All Wildlife for the work on behalf of the HOA, according to the MDE report. Representatives from D.H. Bader did not return calls for comment.

Like that name? “All Wildlife”. Um, maybe they left off the first part “we kill”? Or maybe ABC stands for “Always Bash Critters”? Here’s the address for the attorney general of Maryland in case you want to let him know why destroying Wetlands should have consequences.

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