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

Tag: S


“The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco”

If that whirring noise bothered you yesterday we apologize. It was the sound of Mark Twain rolling over and over in his grave because San Francisco and the Bay Area was HOT yesterday. 110 in Martinez hot. Even though Mr. Train never actually wrote that, I’m sure he would have been shocked.  I’m still shocked.

But hot days are good for sitting inside and planning. At our Kiwanis appearance yesterday Worth A Dam was given a donation and asked to do a presentation for the Boys and Girls Club in Martinez again. That’s a boisterous fun arena that usually requires a fairly short lesson followed by a very fun activity. When I was trying to imagine what we should do I thought of our old wildlife buttons from Mark Poulin. There’s no way to do the keystone activity but why not let every child pick ONE to keep and have them draw that animal?

Maybe the post card could say something about saving beavers…hmmm. Don’t kill the beavers is too heavy handed. How about just thanking them for saving them? previewBetter yet, why not draw the animal on the button they selected on the back of an irresistably adorable postcard and deliver them to the mayor?

So yesterday I made the graphic and  ordered a bunch of 5 x 7 postcards of these with funds from that donation. The hands in the corner are the emblem of the boys and girls club, and should work in our favor. We can also bring a poster and have kids sign their name over ‘their animal’ based on the button they drew. Then leave it with the facility but  the postcards will be delivered to city council. Adorable kid drawn images on the back of beavers or the animals assist will help.

ChildrenFun fact. This photo was taken of children drawing beavers on our very first Earth Day event in 2008. We had no idea an activity like this would be so popular and just bought pens and paper on the way at the drug store. The two little red heads at the back are the daughters of one of our current council members.  I was the daycare teacher of the sons of another. And that doesn’t even count Mark and Lara who saved our beavers the first time around.

There’s no such thing as a sure thing. But I feel that the odds are good it will be at least difficult to quickly dispatch these beavers.

More treats include this fine letter from Charlotte Burns in Palmer, Massachusetts, which clearly needs all the beaver defenders it can get.

Letter: Beavers were only reclaiming their wetlands

It saddens me that residents of the Guelphwood Road area on the Charlton/Dudley line are so adamant about killing beavers that have flooded this road. They built their houses on the edge of a wetland but will not accept that wetlands are homes to critters like beavers.

Beavers play an important role in our environment, creating ponds, slowing sediments which provide food for other critters, and increasing biodiversity of flora and fauna. Their ponds improve local water quality by neutralizing acidic runoff and acting as a sink for pollutants. Dams improve the quality of water by filtering it. Modern Americans seem to prefer sterile, groomed, critter-less environments: chemlawns which kill butterflies and bees, and clean ponds with only stocked fish. They fear buggy, sloggy wetlands which are our greatest flood prevention. This neighborhood needs to get its priorities straight. Killing off nature is having disastrous consequences. Houston was built on swamps; Maine’s blueberries are not getting pollinated; and we’re creating daily crises with global warming. We need to work with nature, not destroy it. Change must start in our own backyards.

Charlotte Burns : Palmer

Beautifully written and well said, Charlotte! We need more writers like you in every state. And speaking of the wisdom to accept beavers, here’s the audio from the Blue Heron Nature Preserve on Altanta NPR yesterday.

Capture


Congress may be unable to pass a background check, a budget or a resolution for more stalls in the ladies restroom, but a bipartisan group of state senators in New Jersey has decided that the old rule declaring that the division of fish and wildlife can only issue 200 depredation permits for beavers per year is insufficient to the numbers of beavers that need killing in the state. Remember that the state is the fifth smallest in the entire country and about the size of a postage stamp.

Leave it to Sweeney

A bipartisan group of lawmakers, including Senate President Stephen Sweeney (D-Gloucester), introduced a bill last week intended to remove the limit on how many permits the Division of Fish and Wildlife gives out “for the taking of beaver.”

Under current law, the state can give out only 200 permits each year. Sweeney insisted the bill (S2665) was in response to a real problem.  “Not that I go out and hunt beavers,” he said. “The problem is they’re actually causing flooding problems where I live.”

A reasonable person, (like say this reporter who is politely writing down everything they’re told), might think, gosh 200 beavers isn’t very many. A reasonable person wouldn’t take the time to look up the legislation S2665 and see that EACH PERMIT ISSUE is good for killing FIVE BEAVERS per year – meaning that it is already permissible to kill 1000 beavers every 365 days.

Lord knows a reasonable person certainly wouldn’t look up the USGS figures for square miles of water in New Jersey, which is 396 or 5.3% of the total state. Even if we assume that water is all excellent unpollted habitat for beavers, it is already legal to kill one beaver for every two or three square miles of water. Which, (if we’re assuming the population is as big as it can possibly be, and thinking of the territory needs quoted in Dietland Muller-Schwarze saying beaver colonies need to be about 2 miles away from each other) means that NJ already gets to kill around half of its entire beaver population.

Why should the garden state settle for half?

Certainly no reasonable person would take the time to write the senators sponsoring this bill on a sunday evening to clarify these issues, teach about flow devices, or reference the essential role that beavers play in water storage and drought protection.

I’m sure you’re aware of the percentage of counties in the US last year listed by FEMA as disasters due to drought conditions. Research has shown time and time again that small dams built by beavers raise the water table, recharge the aquifer, reduce drought, and cool water temperatures through hyporheic exchange. Reducing or eliminating those natural buffers will expose your residents, your fish and wildlife to brutal conditions.

I never said I was reasonable.

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Now for some inexplicable news from Vancouver where the Adrien Nelson has done such fantastic work  to promote flow devices but apparently still needs to accomplish a little more reporter and public works education on how they work.

Beaver Deceivers rid Mission of pesky rodents

Water flow devices remove need to trap and kill

District of Mission public works operations supervisor Dale Vinnish agreed, noting the district used to trap and humanely kill about six to 10 beavers a year.  “It seemed like if we got rid of one, two of them would come back next year,” he said. “If we got rid of two, you might see four of them there next year.”

Now, with the animal rights groups’ help, Mission began installing the anti-beaver devices last summer and now has eight throughout the district. “The beavers are gone,” Vinnish said. “We were fighting them constantly before, but now we just have to go check the Beaver Deceivers and pull a few sticks out so nothing clogs up. So it has been really great.”

Apparently flow devices are the new “beaver repellant”! I suppose it’s great someone from public works think they work and want to use more. But why is the word COMPROMISE such a difficult concept to grasp? If the flow device makes the beavers leave it didn’t WORK and you have wasted your time and money. The reason you install it in the first place is because it makes the problematic behavior leave (not the beavers), so your culverts don’t get blocked and your roads don’t flood. You’d better hope the beavers are staying right there, doing other stuff and keeping more beavers from moving in.

Sheesh!

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