Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: beaverpeeler]
#8409276
05/25/25 04:10 PM
05/25/25 04:10 PM
|
Joined: Oct 2021
Minnesota
Northernbeaver
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Oct 2021
Minnesota
|
And for the bizarro twist on all this...I trap the Willamette primarily and I have yet to ever see one single beaver dam or lodge on the 80 miles worth of it that I trap over the last 45 years. So much for beaver dams detoxifying the water! Beaver dams are rarer in some very good beaver country than a lot of people realize. A lifetime invested in the waters and your opinion invalidated because of some armchair expert somewhere.
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: AK Timber Tramp]
#8409290
05/25/25 04:44 PM
05/25/25 04:44 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
NWWA/AZ
Vinke
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
NWWA/AZ
|
I only see dams on small creeks, and they’re usually generations old, with a big pond or swamp behind them. Beavers aren’t really out there damming up new water, they’re just maintaining dams that their great great great great grandparents built in locations that were favorable to being able to dam it. BS……
Ant Man/ Marty 2028 just put your ear to the ground , and follow along
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: humptulips]
#8409291
05/25/25 05:00 PM
05/25/25 05:00 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
beaverpeeler
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
|
What is the logic they are using to justify the closure of public waters? There is no logic. It is an excuse because they don't like trapping or any other consumptive use of wildlife. Supposedly more beaver will bring back the salmon runs. No trapping will not mean more beaver where they want them because nobody put the word out to cougars they're not supposed to eat them. Yep. However the excuse they're putting forth with HB 3932 is that beaver dams are removing toxic heavy metals and purifying water. Not much mention of Coho habitat in this bill. One could guess that most of the toxics that are impairing waterways would be where there is industry. Read that big navigable waterways where beaver can't build dams anyway. Bizarro world.
My fear of moving stairs is escalating!
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: AK Timber Tramp]
#8409522
05/26/25 12:13 AM
05/26/25 12:13 AM
|
Joined: Oct 2011
Idaho
bearcat2
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Oct 2011
Idaho
|
I only see dams on small creeks, and they’re usually generations old, with a big pond or swamp behind them. Beavers aren’t really out there damming up new water, they’re just maintaining dams that their great great great great grandparents built in locations that were favorable to being able to dam it. I see them building new dams, but it is always on small streams and swamps. Occasionally you will see the beginnings of a dam in some backwater of a bigger creek or small river. But that is some dumb beaver that is just going on instinct, it will be gone come the first good storm.
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: AK Timber Tramp]
#8409523
05/26/25 12:23 AM
05/26/25 12:23 AM
|
Joined: Apr 2009
South Ga - Almost Florida
Swamp Wolf
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Apr 2009
South Ga - Almost Florida
|
I only see dams on small creeks, and they’re usually generations old, with a big pond or swamp behind them. Beavers aren’t really out there damming up new water, they’re just maintaining dams that their great great great great grandparents built in locations that were favorable to being able to dam it. This^^^^ must be an Alaska beaver thing. Maybe those beaver populations are not expanding. You should see em here in southern Georgia.
Thank God For Your Blessings! Never Half-Arse Anything!
Resource Protection Service
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: humptulips]
#8409626
05/26/25 12:25 PM
05/26/25 12:25 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2010
Armpit, ak
Dirt
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2010
Armpit, ak
|
What is the logic they are using to justify the closure of public waters? There is no logic. It is an excuse because they don't like trapping or any other consumptive use of wildlife. Supposedly more beaver will bring back the salmon runs. No trapping will not mean more beaver where they want them because nobody put the word out to cougars they're not supposed to eat them. Beaver are public enemy number 2 to salmon runs where I live. Dams block migration. True to an extent on some systems. Coho juveniles do need some slow moving rearing habitat, but I'm not sure they need beavers to supply it? Of course if they did, on a particular system, one could just regulate trapping on that system or build a dam. Your right though, need some excuses to ban stuff. I am going to ask a simple question. Has there been any studies conducted in Oregon or Washington that have concluded that cougars are negatively impacting beaver populations? Always helps to have a study behind an anecdote.
Last edited by Dirt; 05/26/25 12:52 PM.
Who is John Galt?
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: Dirt]
#8409781
05/26/25 07:54 PM
05/26/25 07:54 PM
|
Joined: Feb 2007
Washington State
humptulips
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Feb 2007
Washington State
|
Beaver are public enemy number 2 to salmon runs where I live. Dams block migration. True to an extent on some systems. Coho juveniles do need some slow moving rearing habitat, but I'm not sure they need beavers to supply it? Of course if they did, on a particular system, one could just regulate trapping on that system or build a dam. Your right though, need some excuses to ban stuff.
I am going to ask a simple question. Has there been any studies conducted in Oregon or Washington that have concluded that cougars are negatively impacting beaver populations? Always helps to have a study behind an anecdote.
To that point I don't know of any. The Makah's did a study on cougar movement and what they eat. The synopsis is they cover the entire Olympic Peninsula and they eat about everything but beavers specifically, they found some cougar key on beaver almost to exclusion of other prey. Several studies past and one ongoing about cougar in Eastern WA but nothing tied to beaver. The Panthera groups has 90 cougars radio collared on the Olympic Peninsula right now and have for a long time. I personally think it is a grift as it is easier to get a grant for studying large predators. I know of a couple studies done to see where relocated beaver ended up, but they didn't seem to categorize mortality. Not a study but slightly better than an anecdote is the catch statistics. In the 60s,70s and early 80s in Grays Harbor County (where I live) there was an average of about 2000 beaver a year harvested. When the price dropped after 86 to 2000 slightly less than half that was the catch. In 96 they out lawed hunting cougar with hounds, and you could see the population melt away over about 15 years. Now the annual catch is in the single digits and that includes nuisance beaver.
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: beaverpeeler]
#8409833
05/26/25 10:03 PM
05/26/25 10:03 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
beaverpeeler
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
|
Vanessa Petro with the Forest Research Lab at Oregon State was involved in a beaver relocation project in the Oregon coast range. She told me that mortality within the first year was around 90%. Of that the vast majority was due to cougar kills. The beavers had tracking devices in their tails.
I sure wish she could have been able to testify at the Senate or House hearings.
Last edited by beaverpeeler; 05/26/25 10:04 PM.
My fear of moving stairs is escalating!
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: beaverpeeler]
#8409835
05/26/25 10:24 PM
05/26/25 10:24 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2010
Armpit, ak
Dirt
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2010
Armpit, ak
|
Even if cougars are the problem, what are they going to do about it?. In essence, if cougars are now reducing the population in some locations, then there is no harvestable surplus for consumptive users. This is a common situation where predator prey situations get out of balance. Trap those beaver or not, they are already doomed possibly to extirpation.
One other thing here that I think causes possible declines in population would be eat backs. If beaver populations get too high for their habitat they tend to have to eat back further and further from water protection. When they have to go so far they become easier pickings for predators. Everything loves to eat beaver here.
Last edited by Dirt; 05/26/25 10:33 PM.
Who is John Galt?
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: beaverpeeler]
#8409837
05/26/25 10:32 PM
05/26/25 10:32 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
beaverpeeler
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
|
The Oregon coast range was only suitable beaver habitat about 50-75 years ago after large wildfire burns and extensive logging opened up the canopy. IN addition, large predators such as cougars had largely been removed from the landscape by the bounty system, hound hunting, and/or poisoning. IN the early 1800's it was reported that the coast range was barren of beavers. It has been returning to that state for the last 50 years with the 1971 Forest Practices Act which does not allow logging within riparian zones and the 1994 Ban on hound hunting for cougars.
My fear of moving stairs is escalating!
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: Dirt]
#8409857
05/27/25 01:11 AM
05/27/25 01:11 AM
|
Joined: Feb 2007
Washington State
humptulips
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Feb 2007
Washington State
|
Even if cougars are the problem, what are they going to do about it?. In essence, if cougars are now reducing the population in some locations, then there is no harvestable surplus for consumptive users. This is a common situation where predator prey situations get out of balance. Trap those beaver or not, they are already doomed possibly to extirpation.
One other thing here that I think causes possible declines in population would be eat backs. If beaver populations get too high for their habitat they tend to have to eat back further and further from water protection. When they have to go so far they become easier pickings for predators. Everything loves to eat beaver here. Not really eat backs but a similar problem exists. Beaverpeeler touched on it. The riparian setbacks, they vary as to class of stream but 100 feet on each side of a stream is about what a smaller stream beavers might move into. More on larger streams. Even a very small trickle will have a setback so all that grows up to larger trees that aren't good beaver food. They are forced to travel farther from safety to find food. I will say I don't believe it makes that much difference as a cat will set on the shore and wait for a beaver. On a smaller stream a beaver doesn't have a chance as a cougar will go right in after them. Even lakes and rivers the beaver population is way down. Cats are just patient hunters, and it is easy to tell where they are working. There're three options; Get hound hunting back and up the permitted take of cougars. Not happening because it is politically unacceptable. Or move or trap something else. I've been doing the latter.
|
|
|
Re: Oregon Trappers update:
[Re: beaverpeeler]
#8409927
05/27/25 09:01 AM
05/27/25 09:01 AM
|
Joined: Jan 2024
Oregon
Deafcaller
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Jan 2024
Oregon
|
I remember reading an article 2-3 years ago that floated the idea of ODFW allowing the use of hounds on lions for a 2 week season in Oregon. Talked to one of the local ODFW folks about it last year and they said the public opinion against it was too much.
Deafcaller
|
|
|
|
|