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

Tag: Steve Straight


Time for an article you are going to love. It’s so good I didn’t want to squeeze it in yesterday. It needs it’s own hallowed space and attention. This is from Connecticut where our good friend Steve Straight has been hard at work making sure the next beavers that come along have a better end,

Beavers are blamed for fallen trees and flooding, and authorities are euthanizing them. Is there a better way to fix the problem?

Last month, South Windsor officials trapped three beavers and had them euthanized. The beavers had caused safety issues at a town park by gnawing on trees near the trail system, which blocked a spillway to a pond and caused flooding issues.

The trapping and killing of the beavers, one of nature’s most industrious mammals, sparked outrage among residents, with some calling for more humane treatment. State officials say they have managed Connecticut’s beaver population this way for decades. But critics say there’s a less drastic, more cost-effective manner to deal with beavers.

He said a solution could have cost the town about $2,000, and volunteers, such as local scout troops, could have helped to wrap the trees. Straight hired Mike Callahan to investigate the beaver situation at Nevers Park.

You gotta love the East Coast, where you can bring in the expert from out of state for less than  a tank of gas. Unlike Martinez where we had to fly Skip 3000 miles. Well, how did it go? What did he think?

Mike Callahan of Beaver Solutions LLC said his company has resolved more than 1,500 human and beaver conflicts since 1998 by using flow devices, such as culvert protective fences and beaver dam pipes. These methods allow the water to flow out of the pond created by beavers, in turn reducing flooding.

“In my experience, flow devices are the best beaver management method for approximately 75 percent of human-beaver conflicts. Where feasible, they offer the lowest overall cost, longest reliability, lowest labor and maximum environmental benefits,” Callahan said.

Callahan said a 12-inch pipe at Nevers Park would maintain a normal flow through the spillway, even if new beavers recolonize the pond and try to dam the spillway again. He said lightweight metal fencing could have been wrapped around the larger trees to prevent them from falling on the trails.

Callahan noted it would cost the town “far less to protect trees” along the trail with fencing than it would for town workers to continue to remove them. He believes beavers may recolonize the area within a year or two.

Ahhh you heard it yourself. Beavers are coming back and there are better, cheaper ways to fix things than by killing

“Fortunately, both the flooding and the tree felling concerns can be managed in a cost-effective, long-term, environmentally friendly and humane manner,” Callahan added, “which would allow the beavers to remain in the park providing environment benefits, public enjoyment and education values.”

South Windsor resident Steve Straight, who lives near the park, opposed the trapping from the start. He said the town should have investigated nonlethal methods first and needs to come up with a long-term solution.

Environment benefits, public enjoyment and education values. Let the beavers do their job. Game point. Set. Match. And the money shot?

“Let the citizens of South Windsor enjoy these fascinating creatures as they go about their work creating a tremendous ecosystem that harms no one. Let’s be clear — the beavers are not going away. And by the way, neither am I.”

How much do we love Steve? A very very lot of much, that’s how much. The best thing a beaver protector can do is be a stone in the river, making it more trouble to continue on the wrong path than it is to correct course and start on a better way. It’s of course good for the beavers, and the environment, But also for the entire community that gets to be part of a humane solution.

This is something we in Martinez particularly understand. If you haven’t seen this in a while I would just point out this is National news with Brit Hume at the end of the clip. And the flow device is already installed, You can see it in the shot over Dave’s shoulder. it’s just that no one believes it will work so the mayor of director of public works don’t even mention it.


When I lay dying, probably sooner than I’d like, surrounded by strangers and IV drips, I’m likely going to remember four important things: That I helped a few special children make a path through horrific pain, that I picked the right husband and was lucky he picked me, that I helped convince our city to let  27 kits be born in Alhambra Creek and that in my own tiny way I encouraged men and women across the continent to try this also.

Like Steve Straight in Connecticut who closed his comments to the South Windsor city council last night with these incredible remarks:

Instead of wasting more money and time killing beavers nearly every year going forward, I would like to suggest that we follow the expert’s recommendations. I call on the Town Council to stop any trapping of beavers now, and to work instead toward coexistence with the next beavers, and to let the citizens of South Windsor enjoy these fascinating creatures as they go about their work creating a tremendous ecosystem that harms no one.

Let’s be clear: The beavers are not going away. And by the way, neither am I.

Powerful, awesome last line, Steve. You are, without a doubt,  the single best thing that will ever happen to beavers in South Windsor.  You can’t imagine how much this matters, to the community, to the council, to the next hopeful person who will try to follow in your footsteps. I’m so grateful our paths crossed and that you  were ready to take up the beaver gauntlet.

Great victory after great pain.


Meanwhile there are plenty other things to be proud of in our beaver hall of fame. Like the beaver ambassadors stellar work in their promotional video for friday night’s premier of Sarah Koenisberg’s film on beavers and climate change.

The teen group is organized and inspired by Esteban Murschel who has been hard at work for two years trying to build a community interest around beavers in West Linn Oregon. He drove down for our festival in 2015 and would have come last year but for the very timely birth of his first son!

Something tells me that this friday the performance auditorium is going to be packed.

Fantastic performance! It is so fun to see you celebrate beavers and use all these talents on their behalf. I especially love your matching ‘portland weather uniforms’ (rain jacket and jeans). You couldn’t have picked a better song.

Although I’m not sure I could have avoided tinkering with the lyrics a little.

A watershed, a watershed
A watershed, a watershed
A watershed, a watershed
A watershed, a watershed

In the river
the peaceful river
the beaver swims tonight

With the fishes
And frogs and heron
the beaver swims tonight

We-e-e-e we’re the engineers
We-e-e-e we’re the engineers

 


Just three days ago I wrote that Nevers park was “bringing in the calvary” and hiring Mike Callahan rather than trapping beavers. I said that because Steve Straight told me that because he had been relieved to hear it from councilwoman Brittany Poster said to him. But it turns out that both Steve and Brittany were lied to. Mike was never contacted and a trapper came and dispatched three beavers the next day. The whole thing was on local news last night and in the local papers this morning.

Beavers trapped, possibly killed after causing issues at South Windsor park

If you’ve been following at home for a while you might remember that the most egregious beaver lies – the real whopper -, are always handed down by the city administrator. Maybe because he’s hired and not elected and will never have to face voter outrage. In Martinez the beavers lead to our cycling through three city administrators. The first famously said that a flow device couldn’t work in our creek AFTER he first said he’d never heard of them. The second asked what “John Muir would have to say about planting trees for beavers” when the eagle scout asked for permission to plant willow, And the third – well, we’ll let you know.

It looks like the South Windsor city manager got stuck delivering some doozies. Beavers, apparently attack people in parks. Didn’t you know? Matthew Galligan is just doing his job to protect the community (and the mayor).

Beavers removed from SWindsor park over community protests

When beavers are trapped, the trappers licensed through the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection determine their fate, Town Manager Matthew Galligan said. They may be relocated, but will more likely be euthanized, since beavers are overpopulating the state, Galligan said.

“There were too many factors that affect public health, safety, and property in place to allow for the beavers to coexist” with Nevers Park activity, town officials said in a written statement Tuesday. Another concern is the possibility of beavers attacking humans who come too close to their young.

Mosquitoes, fish, disease, drinking water. You know the drill. At this stage the city council just throws every possible concern at the all and sees what’s going to stick. At our big November meeting Mike Mensini talked for a half an hour about salmon even though there never were salmon in Alhambra Creek. Because  when you’re in charge you get to say ridiculous un-examined things until you run out of breath and never get interrupted with questions.

At least concerned residents did their part.

Many residents who wished to leave the beavers to their business continue to disagree that removal was the best option, however, and criticized Galligan on social media.

One resident, Stephen Straight of Abbe Road, maintains that town officials were wrong to trap the beavers before bringing in an expert to reassess other options, including methods of tree protection and controlling water levels. The beavers did not pose any threats, he said, calling the yellow tape closure of the trail “a stunt.”

Straight and another resident spoke up at Monday’s Town Council meeting to urge officials to reassess the situation. Both residents and council members were unaware that the beavers had already been removed until Galligan informed them that night.

Good for you Stephen. You gave it your all and these beavers deserved better, As we learned in Martinez it takes every last voice to save beavers, and even then it might fail. Here’s what turned out to be our game-changing meeting. but we didn’t know what would happen at the time. It was part luck and part circumstance and part sheer stubbornness. Without councilwoman Janet Kennedy going on vacation at the time. It all could have ended very differently.

Instead of the Middlechild Productions Documentary “Beavers Las Vegas“.


Wait until you see this fun video beaver rap as poet Steve Schmidt of Connecticut serenades author Ben Goldfarb at a presentation of Eager. Wonderful poetry and some really fun gangly Ben rap appreciation that will start your weekend right. Steve had the odd fortune of reading “Eager” around the same time he happened to see the musical Hamilton, with delightful results. What everyone needs on a Saturday morning from our soon to be VERY GOOD new friend.

Rap for Castor

––for Ben Goldfarb, author of Eager

You got problems out west, you’re runnin’ out of water
Temperatures risin’ and the world’s gettin’ hotter
Tryin’ to mitigate floods and stop runaway fires
You got water in quantity but not where you want it to be

You gave us no respect, so what did you expect?
You thought a buck-toothed rodent would be better as a hat
So you trapped us and snapped us until you’re all that
Too stupid to see that you were fracking up your habitat

You exceeded your need until greed was your creed
Had a shizzle vision of your mission, to speed
a landscape raping you should have been arresting
Now I guess your destiny is manifesting

They call me The Beaver
No, not the one by Ward Cleaver
Castor canadensis
Genus? I’d say genius

We shaped the contents of the continents
Masters of geology, ecology, hydrology, topology
Our diligence, intelligence, experience, and innate sense
could handle any consequence

Now you need us more than ever, brother
If you want to last forever and recover
Looks like you could use a furry god mother
Give you pristine streams, replenish all your aquifers
A salmon run replacin’ all the damage done
Another keystone species where there isn’t one
Just keep in mind the beaver battle cry:
Wetlands Are the Best Lands, and that’s no lie

With us it’s just pond to wetland to meadow to forest
And day or night, oh, the concatenatin’ chorus
So we’ll find a dam spot just where you needed one
Now leave it to the beavers, man: We’ll get the job done

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