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

Tag: Tree planting


I thought today should be full of easy enjoyments, and good cheer. I’ll start with the photos from the t-shirt sales of our friends in Scotland who are trying to save the free beavers of the river Tay.

Pretty cute huh? One of their members recently posted a picture of a chewed tree that the Angler society called “Suspected beaver damage”.It made me giggle so much I had to do this in response.

Police-Line Up: Tree Suspects

Now that was fun! Speaking of chewed trees, Jon unwrapped the willows we planted in 2008 and they have now all been felled and eaten! We’ll be talking about doing a 2011 planting tomorrow at the Friends of Alhambra Creek Meeting. If you’d like to donate your labor, organization, or spare change, the beavers would appreciate it!

Before the sand-painting of trunks by the primary dam.

A final bit of enjoyment for a Monday morning (that is a holiday for many but not for me because I’ve taken TOO many days off to go to Oregon). I just found this on youtube and can’t remember seeing it before. It’s delightful. I love that the beaver is an old man. I don’t suppose Disney knew that the native name for beaver of the Karuk tribe in northernmost California is sah-pihnîich which translates literally  to “by-the-River Old-man”. Perfect!


20 trees have been laid as I write this, and the finishing touches have been applied to the wire mesh defenses on each. Troop 405 scouts and supporters showed up today to help Mitchell with his eagle-aims, and Worth A Dam came along to photograph and pay the piper. City staff helped place and transport the trees.

Worth A Dam treasurer, Jon Ridler, who has been a “man friday” for every possible beaver burden, took the day off work at the power plant to labor in the fields.He joined some hardworking scouts and the full job was completed by 2:00 pm.

I started out the day making friends and talking about beavers at Wild Birds Unlimited in Pleasant Hill. There were more bodies than I expected, and many had never seen the beavers before. As the talk finished, a savvy couple at the back commented that they had been to several of these trainings and this was easily the “Best one they attended”. That put a feather in our already birdy cap and cheered me greatly.

My article will appear in the next issue of the MDAS Audubon newsletter, (further cementing the bird-beaver connection) and I’m sure you’ll hear about it. Knock Knock Knock, at the door as I write this is Chuck the winner of our baby pool contest who picked up his t-shirt and took it proudly away. Thanks Troop 405 and Mitchell Maisel for an important job efficiently done.


Tomorrow REI’s Get Outside and Play summerfest event in Concord. Beaver people are busy people.

Photos: Cheryl Reynolds

Trees: Jeff Anhorn Nursery. Livermore


Ahh spring, the chirping, sprouting time of year when tomato plants are wistfully laid in the ground and Worth A Dam annoys the city about planting trees. This year we wrapped our tree planting plans in a boyscout package to make it more attractive to a city that cannot possibly do something that might benefit beavers. Our “Trojan Eagle” has been fairly effective at getting cooperation, the city is allowing planting along the “beaver festival” park and the corp yard creek side. The planting will occur on the weekend of June 6th and 7th, and staff will help out and even extend a drip system to water some of the trees.

Except for the “bad trees”.

Worth A Dam has insisted at every possible juncture that three trees were needed at the lodge site, to protect the lodge from sun and intruders. Their own biologist, (that Janet Kennedy kindly reminded me the city spent painful dollars to obtain three times), Skip Lisle, recommended increased cover for the lodge. Rona Zollinger’s students pledged to plant the trees and carefully wire wrap them. Dates were laid, plans were made, and the entire project was detailed for the mayor at the May 6th presentation to the council.

Alas, it was not to be. Those, dear readers, are “bad trees”.

We were told those three trees were not “authorized”, were not approved by tree experts, were not part of the “buy-in” from the business community, were too much for an Eagle scout project, and were too controversial for Boy Scouts to be involved. These of course were offered in serial succession as each defense was challenged with pesky fact checking. They were  “authorized” by their own biologist, and by the creek plan originally outlaid by the army corp of engineer, and by the city’s own watershed planting grant, and by the biologist they forced us to secure for the project. There are no property owners on that side of the creek but the city, and certainly no businesses. The Environmental Studies Academy students, who have already undertaken copious planting and stewardship for the city, could take on the responsibility and not over extend the scouts. And finally, three trees is as close to a “teapot” as the beaver “tempest” will ever be.

Sadly the city’s powerful logic-deflector shields were already raised. and our arguments were meaningless.The bad trees could not possibly be allowed under any conceivable circumstances. We were asked deftly “How would John Muir feel about planting trees for beavers?”

W.W.J.M.D.?

If I were to write one more time that I was dismayed or disappointed by this response, I would run the risk of being compared to Charlie Brown and Lucy holding the football. So I won’t be surprised. I just want to ask if this clever WWJMD test could be freely applied in other circumstances as well? What would John Muir think, for example, about removing trees to install sheetpile along a living creek? What would he think about removing trees to build parking lots and covering the earth with asphalt? What would John Muir think about controlling plant growth by spraying along the creek with pesticides? What would John Muir think about forming a redevelopment agency, for that matter?

This is fun. Can anyone play?

Far be it from me, now a member of the John Muir Association board of directors, of which two are descendents of Muir himself, and which are owners of the most extensive collection of Muir information and original documents in the world, far be it from me to attempt to answer that question. I will do what I always do, and pass it along. There’s a board meeting tonight in fact, and I will make sure that I ask how Muir felt about replacing stolen habitat to benefit wild things.

I can’t wait.


To date the beavers have endured a massive scrape of the lower floodplain, and the installation of sheet pile through their lodge, but that is not the last injury the city of Martinez intends to offer.  Since October there has been an outstanding grant application to widen the creek between Escobar and Marina Vista, and to lower the road so that high waters can overflow across the street and re-enter the creek just after the Marina Vista bridge. Like the sheetpile, the plan is a long overdue opportunity seized with beaver momentum.

Here’s the problem: Their new lodge is on the remaining bank slated for removal.

Obviously the beavers needed a new home, and thank goodness they had enough foresight to sneak one on the west side of the bank.  It is hidden under sparse trees whose tops were cut when the crane needed to reach over them, but it is a secure location that the beavers have learned to call “home”. If the plan is executed as outlined in the grant, it, and the few remaining trees that shade it,  could be threatened.

We haven’t heard anything about the status of the grant since way back in October. I was hoping the shrinking economy would put that particular plan on a back burner for now. Yesterday our eagle scout candidate met with  city staff and the city engineer to discuss the location for 18 new trees, but every single one was on the park side, none were near the lodge. This despite the fact that their own biologist, Skip Lisle, told them that the lodge needs to be shaded, and we have asked permission to plant specifically on the west bank. My guess is that they are seeing down the road the need for that bank to be removed and they want to resist planting trees in an area that is going to be demolished.

It’s not hopeless. The grand widening scheme could still take place and the beaver lodge and trees could be left in island formation in the middle of the creek. But for that to happen the city would have to have a sense of responsibility for their well-being and at least a commitment to their care, which they have resisted every step of the way without massive public pressure.

So, the honor of your presence is requested once again, at the Wednesday night city council meeting where our eagle scout candidate will present the tree planting plan to the city council. and we will specifically ask for a few trees near the lodge. Come do the right thing for your beavers.

Again.

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