@@TurboLoveTrain And I see them as wonderful, powerful allies. Even if they cause some ruckus; better them than logging trucks flying past after clear-cutting a mountainside.
So glad to see this video address the challenges as well as the benefits - beavers definitely are a winning solution, but they're not necessarily always easy.
Yeah. Beavers are tricky to deal with, but I have faith in us. I always teach my kids to avoid conflicts by being smarter. If a toddler wants your toy, distract him with something else. If there is a biting ant, then you need to be smarter than the ant. People have real problems in life, like cancer and broken homes. Having a battle of wits against a beaver can seem like a problem but really it's a joy.
Loved the video and the demonstration on how you're adapting to the Beavers - I'm hoping the recent trial introductions into the UK go just as well - they've been extinct here since the 16th century which really messed up the waterways & nature.
I was thinking about it for few years. Why do people destroy Beaver's dams? Why they're angry at them? Since they do lot of good to the nature, the ecosystem, including human's. Yes, water filters, water reservoirs, and make habitat for other animals to live in. I'm happy to see that something's changed in our approach to their hard work.
Unfortunately beavers like to flood areas to make safer/better habitat for themselves. And they don't care if their dam is flooding your fields, or your backyard. That's why a lot of people still destroy beaver dams. But that's not the solution - active management is. Take out the beaver dams that are causing problems, but leave the all the rest.
Have you ever had to maintain a culvert crossing on a road with beavers present? They say “cool, a pre-built dam! I just have to plug this one hole and the water will flow over the dam like it should.” Beavers always win!
@@Steve-cl7hr Oh god, now people are kicking my butt for protecting beavers. Yes, I know what culvert crossing is. And are you sure you want to be one who blames beavers for all the evil on the world?
More Beaver! Let slip the Beaver and rewilding closely follows; just keep the trap-and-trigger-happy fools away from the dam builders. Remember, Beaver taught Salmon to jump.
FYI; for all the Beaver Believers out there: Try, "Eager: The surprising and secret life of beavers..." by Ben Goldfarb. Great read -- good information.
A lot of people use dynamite to blow up beaver dams. I wonder how they would feel if the beavers started blowing up our irrigation dams? Leave them alone, let them do their job. Obviously this comment is not directed at the work you are doing.
No mention of beavers as a keystone species? Wow but so good to see this kind of work in my backyard. Nice to see this after watching tons of videos from entities such as Mossy.earth, etc. Over and over again, it has been proven by the beaver itself (if we’ll let it) what a good environmental engineer he/she is. I’m interested in seeing updates on this project(s). I’m wondering, along with the sticks, are you planting any kind of native groundcover or marshy plants too.
1. At the Chinook Bend site, we have four types of plantings. One standard and three that are experimental. We just planted them this past winter, so we will be tracking progress over time. Very early on, we are interested in whether beavers avoid “short” stakes, or if they cut them as the same frequency as the normal, “tall” stakes. We also collect survival data on a portion of the plants. Over time, our data collection will shift to focus on canopy development and cover. Each season for the first few season brings new observations, and we know from past non-beaver-related studies that what you see in Year 1 can be very different from Year 5. My hope is to go at least 5 years and learn along the way. We’ll continue to learn after 10 years and 15 years, but our study will likely conclude after 5 years. But it does not take 5 years to get new ideas for new approaches to planting to test at other sites. All of these experimental designs are so new that the ideas just keep coming. The things we learn along the way are intended to be implemented at other restoration sites.
Obviously God knows something we humans don't. Otherwise he wouldn't create creatures like beavers and give them ability to impact world around them at this scale.
Beavers saved me! I own a ranch in Idaho, I introduced Beavers 7 years ago on my property and they have created a water shed beyond belief. I did this on my own without government officials getting involved and thus paid. The only people that seemed to mine were government officials (Federal,Stare and local) who seemed to be offended by not being involved! At an annual salary of 75 to 100k I understand. Point is, just release beavers and they do it all the work.
Reminds me of helicopter parents. Beavers will move on. Then plant trees. You want vegetation, get blackberrieshat - provides food and habitat. Snakes love old blackberry canes. Birds feel protected. Got frogs yet? If you leave nature alone, it will build you an ecosystem.
With only a piece of advice/warning: only NATIVE blackberries! (Or NATIVE anything!!) NOT INVASIVE Himalayan or Cut-Leaf blackberries. If you plant invasives, you'll UNDO all the good that was gained.
I personally knew a guy who worked on the Bonniville dam project on the Columbia River, when they finished the dam, come fall, rhey literally looked downstream..and they all Shouted Look At All Those Stupid Salmon Just Swimming Around Down There !!!!!! Get The Nets Screw That ..Get the Fish Wheel!!!! The Govonor for years had salmon listed as a "food fish" with no limit Don't try to tell us who's falt it is that the salmon are all small now , & the Squawfish problem& Let's not Forget about the Plutonium floating downstream now
We used to have a seasonal wetland at the SE corner of Big Finn Hill Regional County Park. Beavers arrived about 12 years ago, damming the creek that flowed out of the wetland, and cutting down trees. The consequences of the beavers' actions are that all the trees have now died in what used to be a seasonal wetland since they are now underwater year round, beavers are cutting down mature trees, trails have closed due to being underwater 10-11 months of the year, and bridges have needed to be rebuilt and added for crossing the streams. I fail to see any positive out of what has occurred over the past dozen plus years. When walking or driving past this new wasteland, it is depressing to think about the vibrant forest it used to be.
Well, all well and good, but without large numbers of herbivores to eat that grass up,the next century is going to see both massive wildfires along the water course in the summer, and huge stagnant swamps down stream.
Incorrect, Uncle T.; The oases created by Beaver ponds become a wildfire buffer, slowing significantly or stopping outright all but the most massive wildfire. The fire burns up to, then is stopped. MOST low to moderate fires cannot get through. Many before/after photos PROVE Beaver-created wetlands are beneficial in slowing/channeling wildfire.
The timber industry runs Washington state and they only hire biologists that agree with them... they do not employ mycologists. They are also notorious for lying about literally everything. I talked to one of the tree farmers out of Sequim working on their experimental plots and not only did they introduce a GMO Doug Fir into the replanting cycle without telling anyone they never ever tested the mycological impact of the tree. The tree harvesters also spray POISON after every clearcut harvest--yet another factoid never advertised to the general public.
Better the attempt for remediation of habitat after the corporate GREED and destruction wrought for the Almighty Dollar, than ignoring the problem created by said greedy corporations.