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

Tag: Sierra Club


So last night a pair of Berkeley beaver supporters took amtrak to our shores to cash in on their “private beaver tour” purchase at the silent auction. Worth A Dam was there to meet them, explain the habitat and introduce our beavers. They will be cycling over the new pedestrian portion of the Benicia Bridge when it opens. Phil is the thoughtful author of the Bay Area Bird Blog, and I met Juliet through her work with the Sierra Club back when the were drafting their position statement on the Martinez Beavers. She is also featured on our video letter to the mayor from last year’s beaver festival. The couple are avid environmentalists and have restored their Berkeley garden as a native plant oasis. They gave us a crash course in willow care while we toured the 3 and a half dams.

The beavers were very obliging last night and made a charming and intimate appearance, even giving them a stand-up view of their ambered bottom teeth. A pond turtle and a slider were seen at the lower dams. The banded green heron displayed boldly by fishing at the end of the pond leveler pipe, and a wiggling little muskrat made a dash on the dam before giving a longer display at the edge of the grass.

All in all the animals were in fine form last night, and the human visitors were all polite, curious and helpful. One of the things I loved at the start of the tour was someone stopping us to explain where to look for the beavers and their general habits. It was no one I recognized, just someone doing their part to introduce our famous residents!

Here’s hoping the ride across the bridge gives them great views! We know you have sharp eyes and won’t miss a single bird sighting on the way over!


So Igor and I piled in his jaunty hybrid and drove out to Antioch last night to talk watershed. The scout involved with the tree-planting came too so he could listen to our overview and catch up to date. Igor spoke first about the way watersheds work and it was a great opportunity to think about our creek and how we have treated it.

One of his main points is that creeks need room to live a normal creek life. They need to meander, to move their banks, deposit sediment, and build up resources. When healthy creeks encounter high flows the water is absorbed by the floodplain and things return quickly back to normal.

Very early on we decided creeks were property lines, and we didn’t want them changing on us. Imagine if we used clouds for property lines? We confined creeks with sheetpile and cement to keep our feet and acres. However, creeks that can’t “meander” simply cut deeper into the earth, so we end up with faster, harsher high flows that are threatening to property. One thing he said last night that I had never heard was that confined channels, whether its concrete or sheetpile, have a life expectancy of about 60 years. It’s not like you build them once and all your problems are solved. In fact many of our impermeable surface creeks in California have reached the end of their life span, and require significant maintenance.

I found this description from Toby Hemenway a while back and was fascinated by the implications of how we changed our waterways when we decimated the beaver population. Add to this that a downcut stream has a lower water table, so tree roots can’t reach it and the vegetation along the bank dies off.

You know what a stream looks like. It has a pair of steep banks that have been scoured by shifting currents, exposing streaks and lenses of rock and old sediment. At the bottom of this gully—ten to fifty feet down—the water rushes past, and you can hear the click of tumbling rocks as they are jostled downstream. The swift waters etch soil from first one bank, then the other as the stream twists restlessly in its bed. In flood season, the water runs fast and brown with a burden of soil carried ceaselessly from headwaters to the sea. At flood, instead of the soft click of rocks, you can hear the crack and thump of great boulders being hauled oceanward. In the dryness of late summer, however, a stream is an algae-choked trickle, skirted by a few tepid puddles among the exposed cobbles and sand of its bed. These are the sights and sounds of a contemporary stream.

You don’t know what a stream looks like. A natural North American stream is not a single, deeply eroded gully, but a series of broad pools, as many as fifteen per mile, stitched together by short stretches of shallow, braided channels. The banks drop no more than a foot or two to water, and often there are no true banks, only a soft gradation from lush meadow to marsh to slow open water. If soil washes down from the steep headwaters in flood season, it is stopped and gathered in the chain of ponds, where it spreads a fertile layer over the earth. In spring the marshes edging the ponds enlarge to hold floodwaters. In late summer they shrink slightly, leaving at their margins a meadow that offers tender browse to wildlife. An untouched river valley usually holds more water than land, spanned by a series of large ponds that step downhill in a shimmering chain. The ponds are ringed by broad expanses of wetland and meadow that swarm with wildlife.

The entire article is a great look at the way our beaver-huntin’-habit changed the face of America in ways we never considered. It also reminded me of the fact that our beavers now have increasingly harder jobs of keeping up creeks formed by years of downcutting.

Good thing they aren’t slackers.


On tuesday the SF chapter of the Sierra Club released a letter to the City Council indicating their support for leaving the beavers where they are and allowing them to continue their natural habitat restoration work. Wildlife chair, Terry Preston, had been to the site and interviewed residents, and made a recommendation for the chapter to adopt language supporting them.

The letter opens with, “The Sierra Club strongly opposes any attempts to relocate or euthanize the beavers that have colonized the downtown area of Alhambra Creek, as well as any attempts to irrepairably harm their lodge, dam or surrounding habitats” Now that’s a nice way to start a letter. They were in part motivated by the fine work of Gary Bogue in his coverage of the beavers, and his support for wildlife in general.

The letter ends with offers of help if the city should need information or consultation to access appropriate strategies. Finally it emphasizes how the dam provides a excellent opportunity to educate children and adults on the importance of habitat and ecology. The letter was mentioned by councilwoman Delaney at tuesday nights meeting, and sent to the entire subcommittee. Thanks Sierra Club, for helping take care of “John Muir’s Beavers”.

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