Date: Fri 14-Nov-1997
Date: Fri 14-Nov-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
Beavers-Hanover-Road
Full Text:
By The Light Of The Full Beaver Moon
(with cuts)
BY DOROTHY EVANS
On Friday, November 14, if the weather is clear, a full beaver moon will be
casting its silvery light over our woods and meadows.
It will also be shining down upon local ponds and wetlands, possibly even
lighting the way for those notorious beavers of Hanover Road, who keep
building their dams and causing water back-up problems for local residents
Bridget Seaman and James Walker.
"Every year we go through this. The beavers build their dams, and it threatens
our well," Mr Walker said Tuesday.
Surface water in which beavers are active can contaminate homeowners' wells,
and Mr Walker and Ms Seaman have waged an ongoing battle each fall to lower
the wetlands that border their property by breaking up the beaver dams
downstream.
"In the morning I break them up, and in the evening the beavers build them
back again," Mr Walker said.
His voice betrayed a certain amount of fatalism as he stood astride a low dam
and poked away at its muddy rim with a garden hoe.
"I was hoping the town would keep after it, but they don't, so I'm doing it
myself," he added.
Of course, as Mr Walker noted, the beavers are only doing what they always do
at this time of year, building their dams and shoring up their lodges to get
ready for winter.
Perhaps that was why the Native Americans named November's full moon after the
industrious beavers that continue to do what comes naturally.
Town Clears Culverts
A call to Frederick Hurley, director of the Newtown Public Works Department,
revealed that the town is doing what it can, short of trapping, to control the
beavers where they have become a problem.
Mostly, this involves clearing out the culverts under the roads, which beavers
also plug up, so the water can flow freely.
"If we trap them, people get upset. We try and work with people on this," Mr
Hurley said.
"If we are going to trap, the only way is to have the state biologist come out
and certify that trapping is necessary and will not completely wipe out the
beaver population in the area.
"Also, we have to have approval of the property owners, and there may be four
or five and no consensus," he added.
The beavers store their food below the water line, he said, so they can get to
it when the pond ices over without being caught by predators.
"They know what they're doing!" Mr Hurley said.
"You truly have to admire their energy and creativity. It's difficult when men
and animals try to live in the same space."
