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

Saved by the beaver


RZAD7WN7JI3W7PY4JS7RUGZ2UAYesterday and last night were not as bad as they feared. There was even a FB update from Safari West at 8:30 pm saying they spent the day feeding the animals and shoring up defenses. I can’t imagine how they’re survived because on the Cal-fire map there is just a huge red cloud from Healsburg to Santa Rosa. But somehow they persisted. The parts of Napa that were expecting to be told to evacuate didn’t have to because the fire turned a little. Which means our Tulocay beavers  are okay. I read a story this morning about a 70 year old couple from Santa Rosa that survived by submerging for 6 hours in their neighbor’s pool while everything burned around them – hiding like beavers below the water until they needed to breathe. They made it through the night and are miraculously not among the 31 dead.

Speaking of beavers and resilience I wanted to share the wonderful letter I received Monday from Judy in Port Moody BC. .

Hello from Canada

I am writing from Port Moody, British Columbia, and I have been following your website for years.   I am a member, and former board member, of The Fur Bearer Defenders.   Last year two beavers moved into a creek just a few minutes from our home and I have been dedicated to making sure this family survives. 

Pigeon Creek is a small stream located in the middle of the Klahanie development on Murray Street, Port Moody.   The creek is part of a green easement that runs between two low rise condominiums.   The population of Klahanie is about 2000. 

The creek was originally landscaped by Polygon development but has slowly been overgrown by several invasive species including Japanese knotweed, Himalayan blackberry and some smaller plants such as bittersweet nightshade.  However there is still a preponderance of Dogwood, Willow, Aspen and a large stand of mature Cottonwood trees.  

In November, 2016, my husband, Jim, and I discovered the start of a small beaver dam.  We are familiar with the activities of beavers because Jim has volunteered to help Adrian Nelson, the wildlife conflict specialist with The Fur Bearers,  install beaver flow devices throughout the lower mainland and up along the Sunshine Coast to help mitigate the effects of flooding from beaver activities.  

You can imagine how hooked and fascinated I was at this point. A knowledgeable beaver advocate in the making! With a husband who helped Adrian install flow devices! And who had followed our website for years! Be still my heart.

We soon spotted what appeared to be two juvenile beavers working to dam a portion of the creek.   The work continued throughout the winter and the two beavers seemed to become more comfortable in their new environment and were seen by the residents on a more regular basis.  

By April we were only seeing one beaver and assumed, rightly as it turned out, that the female may have been pregnant.   During gestation the male built a separate bank den.

During this time I was approached by the new General Manager for the Environment with the city of Port Moody, who told me she wanted to relocate the beavers.   I knew that the province of British Columbia was not issuing relocation permits and that her intention was to trap and kill the beavers.   Adrian Nelson, Jim and I met with her and convinced her to  take a different approach and manage the beavers “in place”.   

Although we have an understanding with this General Manager, I am cautious and am taking every step to ensure that these beavers remain undisturbed.   It has been very stressful for me because she has given me misinformation about the beavers that has led me to believe she is not knowledgeable about them.

Oh, yes the old “We want to relocate these beavers” trick.  If we’ve heard it once we’ve heard it a thousand times. ‘You’re puppy went to live on the farm’. It’s a fairly common ploy (or maybe not a ploy). Maybe folks really think it’s possible until they start making the phone calls and then they just let the story cover their tracks.

We finally got the first glimpse of the two new kits, late in the summer,  when they were about 8 weeks old, now weaned and starting to eat leaves.  

What I find so remarkable about this entire storyline is how the residents of Klahanie have responded to this new family in their midst.   We have a community face book page here, for residents only, and people are constantly posting pictures, videos, drawings and even hosting contests to name the beavers.   The male is named “Brewster” and the two kits are called “Woody” and “Chip”.

Jim and I have been wrapping trees to protect them from beaver damage, tracking what they are eating and I am providing educational posts on the face book page.  I have invited a local biologist to give an evening Wildlife Talk  and we had a good turn out for that event. 

I would never have guessed, when we first spotted the beaver dam, that this pair of beavers would turn out to be such an attraction in our community.  Every day there are people who come to watch for the beavers and the easy viewing location and accessibility provides everyone with a window into the lives of these animals.   Beavers are not common in Port Moody and this is the first one in the city for almost a decade.  Our viewing area is similar to yours, a pedestrian walkway on the bridge over the creek.

My very favorite parts are in bold because I just LOVE the idea of beavers enlivening  and educating the community and attracting attention. Just like they did in Martinez.  Urban wildlife helps neighbors talk to each other. Especially beavers. It’s as simple as that.

I am including a link to a new you tube video that a resident of Port Moody just made about our beavers.

Turn your sound up for this, the train reminds me so much of Martinez!

Judy! We are so impressed by your letter and heartfelt interest in these beavers. We love the video. We think those beavers are enormously lucky to have you and your husband in their corner. Communities that watch beavers are the best kind of protection against over-eager general managers. I wrote her yesterday with lots of ideas and this website has a host of resources for folks wanting to keep beavers safe and energize the public.  I also suggested she might want to sign up for the webinar I’ll be giving this month about how Martinez saved our beavers, and I’ll say more about that later.

Thanks Judy for writing and telling us this fantastic story.

urban beavers

Have any Question or Comment?

2 comments on “Saved by the beaver

Lisa Hodge

Wonderful! Beyond wonderful even!! 🙂

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