NYCkayaker What's up in the Bronx?

j,duffy1 j.duffy1 at rcn.com
Fri Feb 23 18:55:09 EST 2007


Hi Ralph,

If the trappers come up with a nubile young female, we seem to have an 
opening in the Bronx.  It will be interesting to see what construction 
this male beaver on the Bronx River undertakes with some positive 
motivation.  I doubt she'd be impressed with this bachelor pad, he's 
thrown together so far.

Jim,

ralph diaz wrote:

> Beavers have been the bane of my existence for most of the last 
> year in a running battle I have been having with them.  The problem is 
> a small culvert under the long access driveway to my home up here near 
> New Paltz.  Beavers see a culvert as a hole in a perfectly good dam 
> and quickly move to block it with an amazing amount of natural (wood, 
> rocks, mud) and manmade materials (toy footballs and small plastic 
> objects).
>  
> For the longest time I would regularly have to dig out their stuffing 
> materials.   Putting a screen across the culvert opening would mean 
> they would just pile the stuff against it enough to block the flow of 
> water.   But it was easier to clear away every few days.  Then I 
> discovered something on the Internet called a beaver deceiver, 
> basically a long mesh tube about the diameter of the culvert attached 
> to the mouth of the culvert and running out about 10 feet upstream.   
> I improvised one with a roll of mesh fencing.   Beavers are drawn to 
> the sound of running water and frantically seek to block it.  They 
> work on the part of the beaver deceiver closest to the culvet opening 
> where the rushing water sound is loudest as it reverberates in the 
> culvert walls.  But beavers don't see that the other end of the beaver 
> deceiver is providing a channel for water to get through to the culvert.
>  
> This greatly reduced the need to clear away beaver daming material 
> to just ever few weeks.  At this point, the beavers and I now have 
> a working truce: they don't block more than the first half or so of 
> the beaver deceiver and I don't clear away what they have done. 
>  
> Unfortunately the beavers have meanwhile been knocking down fairly 
> large trees in neighboring  upstream properties.  Those landowners 
> have arranged for a trapper to take care of them.   Too bad for the 
> beavers and for me.  The ritual blocking by them and deblocking by me 
> has been an interesting natural past time and part of the living in 
> the country experience.   It makes Manhattan feel very far away.  
> Hmmm, maybe now that beavers have been spotted in The Bronx things may 
> change for you down there. :-)
>  
> ralph diaz
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>**********************************************************************
>The NYCKayaker mailing list is hosted by www.rockandwater.net, and is a public service offered to the kayaking community by the Hudson River Watertrail Association. Learn more about HRWA at www.hrwa.org
>
>To unsubscribe or change delivery options:
>http://www.rockandwater.net/mailman/listinfo/nyckayaker
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.rockandwater.net/pipermail/nyckayaker/attachments/20070223/44dfb82f/attachment-0001.html 


More information about the NYCKayaker mailing list