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

Tag: Susana Park


Susana Park, the new venue for the festival, has a very interesting history. From 1859 to 1930 it was the site of the Masonic Lodge in Martinez, the only hope for the blighted souls of the busling town that had become the way-station  for the greedy and hopeful crossing the straits by Ferry on their way to the leftovers of the gold rush. In 1930 it was purchased by the city of Martinez and planted with trees from 19 countries. Including the cork oaks that line its boundaries donated by the Portuguese community in town. A redwood tree was plated for president Roosevelt on the site. Languishing in neglect for years, the park was ‘refurbrished’ a while back. Those historic stone benches built by those Portuguese removed. This caused such a stir that the backs of two benches were ‘recycled’ into the new design and serve as guardian walls to the entrance because in Martinez nothing is ever truly over.

The new park sports nice wrought iron benches, curved paved paths and three sturdy 2×3 information kiosks that to this date have NEVER ever been used. I like to call them the “More-money-than-sense-signs” because their perpetual emptiness suggests that Martinez has nothing noteworthy to offer.

That is, until June 30th, when a certain beaver festival will make splendid use of them for the very first time.

I just finished designing these to fit into the three stands. I think they will really add something special to the event, explain  our story and why it matters, don’t you?

  

Ahhh that’s more like it! Hey, maybe the city will like them so much they’ll ask to show them permanently! Hahahahaha never mind. Just kidding.

Meanwhile our good friend Brian Murphy of Walnut Creek – who has been an exhibitor at the festival since our very beginning and who helped us hang the duck boxes on the creek – has some very special visitors living under his deck that I thought you’d want to see. These are grey foxes who he saw for the first time just last weekend and are growing up fast. In the beginning he just saw two, but now you can see from the last photo there are five. Mom used the same pipe to raise her kits last year so he was excited to see her return.

 

This seems like a perfect time to mention Robin Ellison of Napa’s donation to our festival, a children’s books which will help them make sense of animal tracks they encounter and understand the natural world around them. It’s a children’s book by Mia Posada. The cover is lovely but I’m strangely drawn to this particular page. I can’t explain why. Thanks so much Robin!


beaver festival SSPYesterday I handed in the goliath special event application necessary for the new beaver festival which felt great to do. You can’t imagine what the response was. (I’ve attached the map and short description they ask for). Description-of-proposed-event

We have gotten to be very good friends with Parks and Rec folk after 10 years and they give us quiet pieces of invaluable advice when we need it.  (Psst you forgot to do this or sign this…) This time it was whispered that when we advertise f or the event we should be careful to call it SUSANA PARK and not SUSANA STREET PARK because some were sensitive about the issue.

!!!!!!

CaptureI will call it anything you like if it means I get to have a beaver festival there, of course. But who on earth calls  it SUSANA PARK? Even the listing of parks on the city website calls it Susana Street Park, the Gazette calls it Susana Street Park, and it’s known locally as Susana Street Park. But I guess Art in the park [and that squatter] Shakespeare in the park called it Susana Park as they’ve been advised, and it’s offially listed on google and map quest as Susana park, so I guess like everything else in Martinez, it’s complicated.

Meanwhile in the normal beaver news Rusty Cohn’s Photo Essay reappeared in the Napa Register today, and I am always very happy when people get to look at his awesome photos.

Photos: Life at Napa’s Beaver Lodge at Tulocay Creek

The Tulocay Creek beaver pond is located next to the Hawthorne Suites Hotel, 314 Soscol Ave., Napa. At the creek, you’ll find river otters, mink, muskrats and herons as well as beavers. Here are some photos of the critters taken by local photographer Rusty Cohn.

“Since Beavers are nocturnal, the heat doesn’t seem to bother them,” Cohn said. “They come out a little before sunset and are mainly in the water. During the day they are sleeping either in a bank den in the side of the creek bank under a fair amount of dirt, or inside a lodge which is made of mud and sticks mainly.”

This is my favorite of course, but go and look at the rest, they are all wonderful.

 

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