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

Tag: Susan Kirks


It’s official, the partial schedule for the 2011 State of the Beaver conference is out and I couldn’t be happier. I present just after Sherri Tippie and before Mike Callahan, which if you think about it, is a pretty nice beaver-loving sandwich. Yesterday I introduced Brock Dolman to Leonoard Houston who organizes the conference and now he’ll be presenting on watersheds as well. Brock was so enjoying my lyrics to the ‘beaver and the salmon should be friends’ that he wants to find some eco-singers to do it at the salmon conference cabaret, which made me very proud. I also introduced him to Tom Rusert of Sonoma Birding where I’ll be doing a beaver talk in February. Their recent Mt. Lion talk had 250 attendees! Tom was interested in maybe doing one on the beaver salmon relationship, so I suggested he talk to Brock and they’re getting together to chat next week. Small beaver world.

Of course I asked Brock if the beavers get a ‘finders fee’? And he assured me that he was “fee-ling” out multiple property owners in the region to find volunteers for a beaver re-introduction project, which is the best kind of fee!

Anyway, since I introduced myself to Susan,  Susan to Tom, and Tom to Brock, I’m thinking of starting my own ecological escort service.  I even made this comercial for GQ yesterday!


Our good friend Susan Kirks writes the following about Cheryl’s recent Sonoma re-discovery. (Go click on the link please so she gets full credit for her smart work.) Turns out that Sonoma is well aware of these beavers, and wants  to take this chance to learn more about the animals. Tom Rusert of Birding Sonoma Valley (who just did an amazing job helping raise awareness with the Burrowing Owl Consortium that is near and dear to our friend Scott’s Artis heart) is working on this years Valley of the Moon Nature lectures and is interested in having me to come talk about beavers. He knows Cheryl because he sometimes picks up extra birds from IBRRC, and is very excited to teach about the relationship between birds and beavers! Think for just a moment about the important connections these beavers are making in the world….Susan-Scott-Tom-Cheryl…I’m thinking that’s the best way to encourage new advocates for these Sonoma beavers is to talk first hand about their impact on our urban creek. I’d be thrilled to do a little wine country, Jack-London trip that benefits all our friends. (No sacrifice too great…) Speaking of which my parents were having lunch in Calistoga last year, wearing their Worth A Dam shirts and met two other people wearing the same shirt! Small world about to get smaller!

Beavers in Sonoma!

by Open.Spaces

While we in Petaluma await in-depth information regarding the recent Petaluma River oil spill and cleanup, there’s good news to report about fresh water happenings in nearby Sonoma.

Cheryl Reynolds of the Martinez Beavers protection nonprofit, Worth a Dam, recently visited Sonoma, following up on beaver dams she’d observed a couple of years ago.  She discovered 3 dams in Sonoma Creek, constructed by the efficient beaver engineers.

The Sonoma Beavers are using both rocks and sticks to build their dams.

Unlike human constructed impervious dams, some benefits of the naturally engineered beaver dam include creation of wetlands through natural water backup, supporting key habitat for other species, and slow filtering through the wetlands of environmental contaminants (Wild Neighbors, John Hadidian, Humane Society of the United States 2007).

Experience of the Martinez Beavers group in installing a water flow control device in Alhambra Creek awaits if ever needed in Sonoma Creek.  Meanwhile, the Beaver, an herbivore eating mostly bark, twigs, roots, leaves and aquatic plants (Natl. Geographic), is busy as can be in Sonoma.

Thanks so much Susan for your beautiful nod to flow devices. Well timed! We appreciate your steady friendship more than we can say!

As if all that isn’t exciting enough, I heard yesterday from Bob Cellini that they are planning the mom memorial installation for Thursday at ten. The Contra Costa Times and Gazette are coming to photograph and Paul Craig’s lovely metal beavers will soon grace the sheetpile. We are thrilled about the development, and you’ll just have to go see it for yourself soon.


Susan Kirks is the woman behind PLAN and the badger advocate at the festival. I read about her online years ago and tracked down her contact information because I thought we might possibly have something in common. She has been working much longer at her much bigger cause to create an open space wildlife corridor in Petaluma, but we still had lots to talk about. She blogs for Petaluma 360 and wrote a fantastic account of Saturday’s event. Today she gets to be a ‘guest blogger’ but since I didn’t exactly ask permission you have to click on the link above and visit her site as well. Okay?

A Great Day for Beavers

by Open.Spaces

Saturday, August 8th, was a great day for Beavers – and for people, too.  The 3rd Annual Beaver Festival was celebrated in downtown Martinez, next to Alhambra Creek.   A walk over the nearby pedestrian bridge that crosses the creek provided a superb view of the beaver dam.  At one point, a green heron came to rest on the dam.  Beavers are nocturnal, so there wasn’t an expectation of a sighting.  What was stunning was the creek, the dam crossing it, the plant life on the creek’s banks, and the amazing quiet and feeling of peace when, just several feet away a lively celebration was in full swing.  It was like stepping from one world into another and then stepping back.  The support for beaver conservation was community wide and very alive.

The Paula Lane Action Network booth was open for Badger talk.  Many people of all ages stopped by to ask, are there badgers here? –  and to learn the story of the Paula Lane Badgers in Petaluma and South Sonoma County.   Others shared their own badger experiences.  A naturalist with the Walnut Creek Open Space Foundation knew of a badger sighting on Mount Diablo several years ago.  More recently, there’s been evidence of some burrowing near Brentwood.  I remembered this kind man from last year.  We’d discussed the benefit of building branch and brush piles among open grassland areas for wildlife cover and habitat.  A woman who used to live in Indiana stopped by and shared she and her dog had come upon a baby badger, covered by leaves, when out on a walk in Indiana many years ago.  “We got out of there very quickly,” she said, knowing the mother badger was probably nearby, possibly out hunting, and would not want to find a woman and her dog near the baby badger!  A young boy stopped by and shared he’s writing a paper about badgers for his 5th grade science class.  I told him I knew a web site that would love to post his paper if he wanted to send it to PLAN.

Next door to the PLAN booth was the Painting Extravaganza.  Frogard Butler, a talented artist, created a backgound mural of the Alhambra Creek area and Beaver Habitat, with nearby local streets.  Children were invited to imagine and creat with colored paints whatever they wanted to add to the mural.   At the end of the day, I went to see the mural.  “It’s very interesting,” the teacher/artist leading the painting process mused.  “They didn’t paint any people.”  Indeed, the mural was filled with all kinds of animals and wildlife, from a mother bird feeding her young in a nest to a nest full of eggs to all kinds of raccoons, skunks and beavers.  A lone scarecrow in a grassy area was the sole human-like expression.

At Noon, children led a procession of a beautifully handpainted Beaver Banner through the festival paths.  Throughout the afternoon, musicians entertained festival goers, culturally diverse and musically joyful.

Also close to the PLAN booth were the Mount Diablo Audubon Society, where adults and families with children shared shifts and talked about the amazing bird life in Contra Costa County; the National Park Service, with a friendly and kind Ranger who knew everything about the John Muir National Historic Monument; and the Burrowing Owl Conservation Network, a grassroots group that organized to protect Burrowing Owl habitat in Antioch, becoming a resource and advocacy group for the species.

Another activity I found charming was – the charm bracelet.  Young people visited festival sites and learned about the beaver and its influence in our environment.  They visited the Friends of Alhambra Creek booth for a dragonfly charm, the Salmon Protection and Watershed Network booth for a salmon charm, the Native Bird Connections booth for the bird charm, the Lindsay Wildlife Museum display for an otter charm, and Worth a Dam’s headquarters booth for the beaver charm – and questions and answers about what they learned – and then the bracelet to link all the charms together – demonstrating the links in the ecosystem.

Heidi Perryman, Cheryl Reynolds, and everyone with Worth a Dam (www.martinezbeavers.org/wordpress) once again organized and provided, really, an incredible venue for wildlife appreciation and environmental education – with lots of fun – in support of the Martinez Beavers.  The Channel 5 evening TV news on Saturday night broadcast the day’s events and, again, elevated appreciation and awareness for Nature and the human place in it.

Isn’t that great and generous writing? Have you clicked on the link yet? Go ahead, I’ll wait. And when you come back I’ll tell you a secret. I am certain Susan became undeservedly fond of me when I told her the story of my childhood neighbor (the first female sheriff in Contra Costa County) throwing a dead stuffed badger over the fence for me to see: 3 year-old Heidi very weirdly decided that this dead fierce creature would become the treasured stuffed animal that I carried around and slept with for years. It was about 4 feet long, had very coarse fur and razor sharp claws. Ahhh. My parents knew better than to let their daughter sleep with a dead animal, but I was inconsolable without it, and my odd attachment prevailed. I am certain that it had an effect on my developing personality because I am told I can be fairly stubborn. (I say tenacious!)  Who ever performed the taxidermy did it very poorly because this particular badger was quite thin and long….I didn’t find out badgers were bunchy and short until I was 22.

Thanks Susan for the great article and the enormous advocacy you have done/are doing. I’m was so happy to see your smiling familiar face at the festival and can’t wait to see the remarkable finished project you will achieve.


Kent Porter/The Press Democrat

UPDATE: PATHOLOGY REPORT

Susan just wrote to let me know that the necropsy confirmed the young badger had canine distemper, a commonly occurring disease for these animals.

The preliminary pathology report returned today and Wildlife Rescue passed on the information to us.  The female badger, estimated age 1-3, who was very underweight, had canine distemper.  Wildlife Rescue says that is fairly common in raccoons and foxes, etc.

___________________________________________________________________

Is this the saddest badger picture ever taken? Look at that droopy head and those listless eyes. This badger was picked up weak and sick at the edge of Paula Lane, and it’s a testimony to the hard work of the local wildlife workers that it made it as long as it did. The article describes it as a male but our badger friend Susan Kirks of the Paula Lane Action Network, who was there and should know, insists it was a youngish female. It was found the day the local article ran in response to the chronicle and some wonder whether there might be human causes.

The latest badger was spotted not far from a known badger colony on Paula Lane. Neighbors are trying to preserve the 100-year-old den in a grassy field and have secured a $1 million grant from the Sonoma County open space agency to help buy the land.

Wildlife biologist Kim Fitts said the 11-acre piece is a core breeding area. The badger found Wednesday likely was born there earlier this year and wandered off in search of food, she said.

“A lot of people look at it and say it’s just an open field,” Fitts said. “But to a badger, it’s a lot more than that. It’s extremely important for the survival of the population.”

Susan writes that there has been a flutter of attention to the issue since the article, but that this a sad turn of events.

“A female badger was taken in by Wildlife Rescue about 10 days ago (the second badger in 6 weeks after 16 years of our Wildlife Rescue Center never having any…) and it was at the south end of the Paula Lane corridor.  She was very undernourished, had a small wound on hindquarters, looked like puncture, and weighed about half of the normal adult weight.  Estimated at 1-3 years of age.  Over the weekend she went into seizures and the vet euthanized her.  Wildlife Rescue sent her body to UC Davis for necropsy and the pathology report is awaited.  I and our biologist and the local news photographer had the opportunity to see her out at Wildlife Rescue.  She was of course a beautiful wild creature, but very unnatural behavior, no growling, lethargic, etc.”

Waiting for the pathology report from Davis is sadly familiar for beaver lovers. I’m sorry the badger wasn’t able to make it in her big world, but I hope everyone sees this picture and decides these beautiful creatures are worth saving.

Keep up the good work, Susan. Remember the quote from Brock Evans, “Endless Pressure, Endlessly Applied“.  Oh and in case that’s not inspirational enough for you, can you guess what the word Brock means in england?


I’m sure that you all remember our badger friend, Susan Kirks, who has been working to save their habitat by protecting open space in Petaluma. She was at the beaver festival and made a slew of connections. The city of Petaluma is partnering with her organization Paula Lane Action Network (P.L.A.N.) and is negotiating a deal to purchase the land for a community wildlife corridor and educational center. There is just a little more fund raising to do to make it possible.

Carolyn Jones, the reporter from the Chronicle who has almost always been kind to us, met up with Susan and ran a nice story this week on the Petaluma Badgers. To my mind it has too many quotes along the lines of “beavers flood creeks” etc, and not enough about the good that they do, but still it got people’s attention and it was good press for her cause. Because of this I was able to send it along to our friends at Bay Nature, the Daily Planet, and the SF Bay Wildlife Info who can’t wait to follow up. It’s exactly the kind of story that gets written about because who thinks of badgers in Petaluma?

Susan writes excitedly about her week since the article came out:

So far — I came home Tuesday and there was an envelope in my little black mailbox from a woman who lives in Paradise, CA – with a handwritten letter and a check for $25 – thanking us for all we are doing to help to save the badgers. I do not know her and called yesterday to say thanks. Then, the Open Space District a call  (and referred her to us) from a woman who’s the Chair of the “North Bay Badgers,” the alumni group for Univ. of Wisconsin (“Bucky Badger” is their mascot) and she thinks the Bay Area Badgers might want to do something to help, very enthusiastically said maybe they could do a fundraiser to help us with the land acquisition costs – or something! And this morning there’s a message from our local paper, the Press Democrat, saying they heard about the story and [finally] want to do a story.

THANK YOU for being you and being where you are.  I had no idea a simple request for doing an article on badgers, to connect with beavers and other wildlife, might lead to this.  I’m hoping for all positives!  The City of Petaluma is abuzz.  People are being very nice to us!  S

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