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

Tag: The Beaver Trust


A horrific report on climate change dropped yesterday indicating the window for saving our necks is rapidly closing, but there is one little silver lining. Emily Fairfax said she never in a million years expected to show up in UN.

Ben Goldfarb kicks off the third season of the Lodge Cast from the beaver trust. This is a nice listen.


How are your muses feeling this fine Memorial day weekend? Maybe you can imaging spending some of it by a windowsill somewhere with pen in hand and writing about beavers? I sure can. The inimitable Beaver Trust is giving prizes for the best ecological beaver poem. I know you want to enter.

Nature and the Ecological Emergency International Poetry Competition 2021

Beaver Trust is delighted to announce its inaugural International Poetry Competition on the theme of “Nature and the Ecological Emergency”. We are continually inspired and moved by people’s creativity and love of nature. This competition is about exploring new ways to think about nature and our connection with it, whether through the engaging, humble beaver, the wide range of emotions brought about by the ecological emergency, our recovery and resilience building, or any other aspect of nature and ecology.

Beaver Trust is working in association with Resurgence & Ecologist magazine, who will print the winning entry and feature the other prize winning poems online.

Poems are invited that deal with any aspect of nature and the ecological emergency. These terms will be given a wide interpretation by our guest judge Terry Gifford.

Tempted yet? Winning entires are paid cash award. Here are the rules.

Rules of Entry:

  • The competition is open to all. International entries are welcome.
  • Poems should be on the theme of Nature and the Ecological Emergency. You may interpret this in any way you wish.
  • There will also be a special prize for the best poem that has the theme of beavers at its core.
  • Poems must be in English and not exceed 40 lines of text. There is no minimum length. Titles, epigraphs, dedications and blank lines are not included in the line count.
  • Poems must fit on a single side of A4 and must have a title
  • Poems are judged anonymously. Each poem must be on a separate page, which must not bear the author’s name or any other mark by which the author could be identified.
  • Online entries are preferred – please send a .doc or pdf document to poetry@beavertrust.org with competition entry as the subject header.
  • Please first pay your entry fee online at https://beavertrust.org/poetry.
  • Please accompany your entry with the following information: name of poet, title of poem, contact details including phone number and the Paypal reference number you received when you paid your entry.
  • If you are unable to enter online, you may send a Postal Entry. Two copies of each poem are required, accompanied by a covering letter with your name, address and phone number, a list of the poems submitted and where you heard about the competition.
  • Entries should be sent by normal post (NOT registered post) to: Poetry Competition, The Cornwall Beaver Project, Woodland Valley Farm, Ladock, Cornwall, TR2 4PT. Please quote your Paypal reference number if you have paid online, which is our preferred option. If you need to send a cheque these should be made payable to The Beaver Trust. If you require confirmation that your postal entry has arrived please enclose a stamped self-addressed postcard marked ‘Acknowledgement’. 
  • There is no restriction on the number of poems that may be submitted, provided the appropriate entry fee is included.
  • Poems must be the original work of the entrant, unpublished and not accepted for publication in any medium. They must not have been awarded a prize in any other competition.
  • Winners will be notified by email or post. No person will be awarded more than one prize. 
  • Poems entered will not be returned. Make sure you keep a copy for yourself.
  • Copyright will remain with the author, but the organisers reserve the right to publish any of the prizewinning poems as they deem appropriate.
  • Once entered, poems may not be amended.
  • Shortlisted poets will be informed on Tuesday 2nd August 2021.
  • Shortlisted poets will be invited to read their poems at a ceremony at the Quaker Meeting House in Bradford on Avon on Tuesday 28th September, at which there will be the opportunity to meet experts from the Beaver Trust. Results will be announced at the ceremony. 
  • The full list of winners will be announced on our website, https://beavertrust.org shortly after the presentation.
  • The judge will read ALL the entries
  • The judges’ decision is final and no correspondence will be entered into.
  • Beaver Trust reserves the right to change the judge if the need arises.
  • In exceptional circumstances the organisers reserve the right to return poems and entry fees.
  • The Competition is open to all, other than team members, trustees and staff of the Beaver Trust. There is no age limit to entries
  • ALL EMAIL ENTRIES MUST BE RECEIVED BY MIDNIGHT 31st MAY 2021. We will accept postal entries received by Saturday 5th June, provided they are post-marked no later than 31 May.

They are so good at this. English beavers are so lucky to have them. Here’s what you win. I am most jealous about the clay beaver made by the creators of Wallace and Grommet. But maybe I’m quirky that way.

1st prize – £150 and publication in Resurgence & Ecologist magazine
2nd prize – £50
3rd prize – £25

Additional prizes

    • A further prize will be awarded for the best poem with a theme of beavers at its core – £100 – plus a plasticine beaver made by renowned model-maker Jim Parkyn, of Aardman and Shaun the Sheep fame.

Well sure, I already had my entry written, it doesn’t quite fit the theme of impending ecological doom, but sure describes the doom that already took place.

 


Happy November.

Last night was a blue moon and coming up next is the Beaver Moon. So of course its a great time for organized walks and trips to the pond. In Massachusetts the trip will cost you a whopping 25 dollars!

A Twilight Walk Exploring the Wonderful World of Beavers at Stony Brook

It is so exciting to be at Stony Brook around sunset and during twilight. The fading light signals the start of the ‘day’ for many animals. Creatures such as beavers, foxes, raccoons and many others will become active, foraging and moving about. During this walk, you will learn more about beaver family life, lodge and dam maintenance, home range, and how they contribute to the biodiversity of open space. Bring your flashlight and we’ll cover the lens in red to preserve our night vision before we head out on the trails. A $25.00 registration fee is required for non members.

Beavers are not a cheap date. And getting a host out of their warm house isn’t easy on a wintry Massachusetts evening. Understood. Well it’s something to look forward to. And lord knows we need a collection of those in these troubled times.

Here;s another one for you. Hint: turn your volume UP.

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Doesn’t that look amazing? I recognized the faces of Derek Gow, Gerhard Schwab and Chris Jones in the clips, I’m assuming the other man is the researcher, but we’ll see. Here’s the media they released with their trailer.

We are SO excited to share this brand new teaser with you giving you a bit more of a glimpse into the incredible people, species and habitats Sophie Pavelle encountered this summer.  From beavers within enclosures here in England to wild beavers in Scotland and Bavaria, join Sophie on a journey of discovery as she learns about what a future might look like with beavers living wild in our rivers and landscapes across Britain.

Oooh I can’t wait. The Beaver Trust in England has a VERY deep bench, and lots of talent just waiting in the wings to help them along. Expect great things. I do.

Finally a fine runner up from the people’s choice award for best photography from the Museum of Natural History.

Oliver Richter

Oliver has observed the European beavers near his home in Grimma, Saxony, Germany, for many years, watching as they redesign the landscape to create valuable habitats for many species of wildlife including kingfishers and dragonflies.

This family portrait is at the beavers’ favourite feeding place and, for Oliver, the image reflects the care and love the adult beavers show towards their young.

Beautiful Oliver, and welcome to our favorite photos beaver cannon. You’re among friends.

 


One of the things I said in my chat with James Wallace of the beaver Trust that beavers can show off best in England is ecological impact with a baseline. As in our stream looked like this for years and years, then we added some beavers, and now it looks like THIS. But with statistics, so that scientists pay attention and people take it seriously. Apparently I’m not the only one who thinks so. This nice writing is from Joshua Harris of the Ecologist.

Bringing back beavers

We tend to overlook the effects that living organisms have on their physical world because most of the ecosystems around us have been “downgraded” as we have removed the important species – thus, in these cases it is mainly physical processes that determine how organisms survive.

But there is now an increasing weight of evidence that the interaction works both ways: the earth shapes life, and life shapes the earth. 

Beavers’ engineering work benefits many kinds of wildlife: ponds are perfect for frogs and fish larvae, riffles and gravel banks for dippers, swampy areas for water rails and moorhens, dead trees for woodpeckers and owls, and lush coppiced vegetation for songbirds.

The fact that beaver habitat is ideal for so many species should not come as a surprise: beavers were present in our ecosystems for millions of years, so many wetland species may have actually evolved to live in beaver habitats.

Oh yes the beavers make the difference. And a stream without a beaver is like a car without a steering wheel. It will probably still go places. But probably not really the places you want.

Through studying the effects that beavers have on streams, it has become clear that deeply incised river channels disconnected from their floodplain, which we perceive as the norm, are in fact a consequence of the removal of beavers, and other human impacts.

Before we deforested and farmed the land and hunted beavers to extinction for their fur and scent glands, wetlands would have filled the bottoms of valleys, with snaking channels, ponds, wet meadows, and willow scrub.

By bringing back the beaver, and allowing our rivers to freestyle through the landscape, we could revive these incredible ecosystems. Beaver engineered wetlands could fan out into every valley in an interconnected network, like arteries pumping life back into the landscape.

So many other species could flourish in the habitats that beavers create: otters, water voles, marsh tits, spotted flycatchers, lesser spotted woodpeckers, water rails, egrets, lapwings, redshanks. Incredible species which we’ve almost forgotten could return – white tailed eagles, cranes, and even white storks, which last bred in the UK in 1416 but are just starting to make a comeback.

Be still my heart. The author of this fine blog entry is a young ecolologist at Cambridge. He volunteers with the beaver Trust and we are expecting great future contributions.

A revival of beaver ecosystems would have wider environmental and economic benefits beyond increasing biodiversity and bringing wildness back into our lives. Their leaky dams hold back water in floods, and release it gradually in drought.

By retaining water in the headwaters of catchments where the land is less valuable for farming, they could protect more productive arable land further downstream. As we experience more extreme weather events due to climate change, reintroducing beavers to our river systems could make a valuable contribution to reducing the damage to villages and towns.

The lush swamps that beavers create have been shown to filter out fertiliser and pesticide runoff, and reduce the washing away of soil to the oceans – something which is currently visible from space whenever heavy rain falls.

As vegetation builds up in the ponds it forms peat, and the carbon that was sequestered by the growing plants is locked away.

We’ve spent thousands of years trashing the complex connections in our living world, and we’ve created ecosystems which are a mere shadow of their former selves.

If there is one animal which we need in Britain right now, it has to be the beaver. The bang for your buck in terms of biodiversity and wider environmental gains is huge.

Gosh I like reading about people who are finding out how awesome beavers are by watching the difference they make for the first time.  I believe it was Voltaire who wrote famously “If God didn’t exist man would invent him”. Very true, but I’m going to say if, by some chance, the UK hadn’t existed for 500 years without beavers we would have had to invent them, because they are SO DARN USEFUL at proving our point about why beavers matter.

Thanks Joshua. 

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