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

Tag: Ogden Wildlife Rehab


CBC the Beaver Whisperers airs tonight and folks are getting ready for the beaver ecology boom that follows! Over in Perth several watershed groups are arming themselves with wire and flow devices to teach folks how to live with beavers. Don’t believe me? See for yourself.

Local stewardship councils host beaver workshop in Perth April 22

EMC News – The beaver is a brilliant hydro-engineer and a colossal pain in the butt. What does it take to live side-by-side with beavers? For answers, go to Beavers and Us, an all-day workshop on Monday, April 22 in Perth. The Stewardship Councils of Lanark, Renfrew, Frontenac, Lennox & Addington and Hastings counties will co-host a productive day of fascinating revelations about Canada’s largest rodent. Read on for the impressive line-up of speakers.

I wanna go! Don’t you want to go? Mind you Perth is very near Ottawa so Mayor Watson and his friends from Stittsville  should be able to zip on over and learn something. The program looks amazing. Check it out:

  • – The Influence of Beavers at the Watershed Scale by Cherie Westbrook, professor and researcher at University of Saskatchewan Hydrology Centre
  • – Cooperative Responses to Beavers by Conservation Authorities, Municipalities and Landowners by Rudy Dyck, Director of Watershed Stewardship Services, Rideau Valley Conservation Authority
  • – Ontario’s Road Crews Defend Against Flooding Every Spring and Fall by Mike Richardson, Public Works Supervisor, Central Frontenac Township
  • – Successful Beaver Management: Tools and Plans by Michel Leclair
  • – Matching Wits with the Beavers: My Relationship with Beavers on 300 Acres of Mississippi Drainage by Don Cuddy, Regional Ecologist (in his past life!)
  • – Roles of Beavers in a Constructed Wetland by Cliff Maclean, Hastings landowner
  • – Finding Beaver Dams Using Remote Imagery by Jean Thie, Remote Sensing Specialist
  • – Dam Builders: the Natural History of Beavers and their Ponds by Michael Runt

My, my, my. What a nice way to celebrate Earth Day! If you’re in the area I’d definitely make a point of attending. that makes 8 positive beaver articles this year, for those of you following along at home. It’s still March, so I’m hoping 2013 gets 25.

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Update on the “hero” beavers of Utah. Apparent they have given up on finding the parents and are calling them ‘orphans’.

Salt Lake City’s Beaver Heroes Now Orphans

A third beaver is now in the care of Erickson and her team at the center. The third beaver came in covered with thick sludge, but seems to be recovering faster than the original two. Erickson believes this third beaver may be from a different family, whereas the original two are siblings.

All three beavers showed signs of intestinal problems resulting from diesel fuel ingestion. However every member of the trio ate at least a little bit during the past two nights.

Erickson’s team spends twelve hours per day with the beavers, including nine hours of “tub time” helping the beavers swim. The second and third beavers to come into the center have made the most recovery and are starting to show normal beaver behaviors, such as slapping their tails when startled.

Sadly, the beavers may have been orphaned by the 8,000-gallons of diesel fuel spilled by a Chevron pipeline.

I’m so glad the beavers are hanging in there and doing better. And glad that Ogden Wildlife knows how to connect with us if there’s anything we can do to help. No word yet on why it is ‘sad’ when beavers get sick because their dams trap leaking diesel but ‘necessary’ when beavers are crushed to death by a conibear trap because their dams block roadways. Isn’t diesel used on roadways? I’ll try to keep on this story until we find out.

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Finally a reminder that spring is here and new kits are just around the corner. Here is a demonstration of why beavers make the most patient parents you will ever see in the watershed. This is from Paul Scott in Blairgowrie Scotland, enjoy!


Do you ever see those old time black and white movie reels with piano accompaniment where there’s a hero that’s incredibly saintly, and a villain with a black mustache that usually ties a helpless damsel to the rail road tracks? (I’m not sure what the fascination was for killing girls with trains…You would never kill boys with trains. I’m sure there were an array of other weapons around, guns, knives, hammers… and the train would still kill her if she was standing UP, but I guess train tracks and supine women make a nicer visual for all those stirring loins.)

Anyway, believe it or not,  those melodramatic tales are retold on the beaver stage today.

Hero beavers of Willard Bay spill on mend at wildlife center

Two beavers, perhaps siblings, are being hailed as the heroes of the diesel fuel spill at Willard Bay State Park, but the dams they created that slowed the spill from reaching the reservoir also led to their being saturated in the toxic substance.

The beavers, thought to be yearlings, were captured by emergency-response workers and Utah Division of Wildlife Resources conservation officer Mitch Lane on Tuesday morning and delivered to the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center of Northern Utah in Ogden.

This is apparently the third time in as many years that a leaking pipe line from Chevron has gifted the state of Utah, this time in Willard Bay state park, which has forced evacuation of much of the area including the Great Salt Lake. They are worried the Diesel will get into the reservoir, but particularly grateful that it was slowed by a certain heroic beaver dam.

Diesel is nasty, nasty stuff and even after a loving cleaning by the volunteers, one of the beavers isn’t doing so well at the moment. All our fingers are crossed for his recovery. And for selection of a shiny new diesel-free territory to release in. And that no family members were left behind. If you want to support the Ogden Wildlife rehab efforts (and beaver rescue in particular) you can donate here.

Now for the villain part of our piece:

Sherwood Park resident eager to get rid of crape myrtle-eating beaver; thinks rodent lives in underground sewer

HUNTSVILLE, Alabama — The sight of a beaver waddling across her side yard both startled and relieved Mary Dyer.   Her Sherwood Park home is nowhere near a pond or creek, so there was no reason to expect the instinctive dam-builder on her property. But at least it explained why all eight of her crape myrtles had disappeared down to the stumps.

“I was thinking there were some kids in the neighborhood testing out a new hatchet or something, Dyer said. “So that’s good to know, that that wasn’t happening.”

Ahh Alabama, where kids really could be testing out a new hatchet or something. And where FEMA awards hundreds of thousands of dollars to the the drought stricken land. And where I just got a snotty email from the man responsible for killing geese and beavers in Pell county because he “expected more understanding from someone with my education”.

Well apparently since there are no beavers, and no streams, lost dispersers are forced to live in the sewer system, which I suppose is fine until you meet an alligator.

There are no natural creeks in Sherwood Park, a 50-year-old subdivision off Old Madison Pike near Research Park Boulevard. But there is a large network of underground storm drains. And if you think a beaver living in a sewer is a sad existence, you haven’t heard the worst of it.

Turns out beavers occupying storm drains is fairly common, especially as man and nature continue to encroach upon another.  Chris Keenum, owner of Keenum’s Problem Wildlife Control in Hartselle, said it’s a regular occurrence to see beavers building dens in storm drains each spring.

Of course Chris would be the go-to quote for the vexing tale of beavers. I especially enjoy his dog-eat-dog (well beaver-eat-beaver) account of how viciously the animals treat one another, (ostensibly so that human reaction doesn’t look cruel by comparison).

“Well, before the mother gives birth, she has to get rid of the kits that are already there. Usually when they’re 2 years old. She’ll bite them and do whatever she has to do to kick them out.”

The young brothers and sisters generally will venture out together and try to settle on the fringes of their parents’ home. Most of the time, however, that territory already belongs to another beaver, who takes a dim view of freeloaders in his self-built pond and fights off the young visitors. This pattern can continue repeatedly until the beaver finds a safe haven far away from established beaver homes, Keenum said.

Welcome to the sewer.  Keenum recently caught a beaver with 21 bite marks received from rough encounters.  “It looked like two beavers had held him down and two other beavers had beat up on him,” he said.

Or maybe like the neighbors dog had terrorized the poor disperser when he had no place to call home. Sheesh. Why do reporters ask for quotes from trappers? Its like asking inmates for quotes about the legal system. I’m sure they know SOMETHING about the law, but it probably shouldn’t be a reporters first choice.

In 1978, refuge officials intentionally released more than 50 alligators to gobble up excessive beavers. That didn’t solve the problem, so now rangers spend countless hours dynamiting the dams or breaking them up with heavy equipment. Sometimes, they are back a few days later doing it again after the busy beavers rebuild.

Nice. But this is my favorite part.

“The Humane Society of United States actually recommends euthanizing them,” Abernathy said. “We try to relocate them when we can.”

Yes, that crazy humane society. Always out recommending killing beavers. Remind me to send this to John Hadidian.

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