05/11/2026
A friend gave me this mug - being 'like' a beaver would be good :-) Hard-working, determined, focused on the job at hand, and always steadily moving forward a stick (aka step) at a time.
We're a non-profit promoting humane. practical solutions for living with beavers, coyotes & wildlife
Our volunteers work with government agencies and private homeowners to adopt policies employing non-lethal management for wildlife. Through education we hope to promote an appreciation of wildlife, and to provide knowledge of the easy precautions to avoid any conflicts.
05/11/2026
A friend gave me this mug - being 'like' a beaver would be good :-) Hard-working, determined, focused on the job at hand, and always steadily moving forward a stick (aka step) at a time.
04/29/2026
Today is International Save the Frogs Day! Go to the website for info
03/04/2026
It's not yet spring, but there is a lot of runoff at the Taylor Creek visitor center in SLT. And a family of beavers have built a new lodge near the elevated boardwalk-overlook (which is just past the Stream Profile Chamber, looking downstream). The lodge is anchored in an old snag, and is quite large!
11/05/2025
15 years ago today.... we started the Sierra Wildlife Coalition, to promote coexistence with our beavers.
Interesting study - beavers have been in Grand Teton NP for centuries
03/02/2025
Interesting and simple outline of how beavers change creeks, spreading them out to slow and spread water, creating habitat for so many others while replenishing the water table for vegetation.
I have spent many-a-Tuesday trying to unpack the complexities of beavers and their effects on the waterbodies they live in. It is that complexity that draws me to beaver habitats in the first place. But while the interactions between beavers, sediment, water, vegetation, and wildlife help tell a long and detailed story about the importance of beavers on the landscape, it can be an overwhelming story.
So, I wanted to get back to the beaver basics. And I think this image does it nicely.
This is an outline of a beaver colony looking straight down on it from above. The water flows from the top of the image to the bottom. All I did here was draw lines along the edges of water. You can see what the un-beavered stream channel looks like at the top and bottom of the image.
This gets at the heart of beaver impacts on the landscape. Beavers take simple streams and make them complicated. They slow things down. They give the water flowing down that stream the time and space it needs to do what water does so well on every landscape… produce an exceptional abundance and diversity of life.
The single-thread stream channel that feeds this beaver colony is about 8 ft wide. At its widest point, the beaver wetland created by that same stream is 320 ft wide… 40 times wider. The feeder stream is a single-thread channel along most of its length. If you take a cross section of this beaver colony at its most braided spot, it consists of 6 different stream channels.
And this is just one beaver colony in a relatively beaver-rich state, and not even a very big one. I know of a beaver complex that starts as a 5-ft wide channel and balloons to almost 1,000 ft wide. I know of beaver complexes that are 30-50 times wider than the stream and extend for many miles along a stream drainage. Just imagine the impacts of thousands and thousands of these wetland complexes spread across our waterways.
We owe a lot to beavers, even though we haven’t fully calculated their contributions (yet!). They are out there storing water and sediment and using it to create floodplains that are packed with wildlife and are more resilient to floods, fires, and drought.