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My Rights As An American

Nice beaver!

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Had not seen this anywhere yet so forgive me if I missed it.

 

I see that the beaver rescued from Tempe Town Cesspool has been nursed back to health at a rehab center and been released northeast of Wickenburg by Game and Fish. Seems there is a riparian stream large enough on a ranch for reintroduction. There are three other beavers there already. Seems like a very neat story to me. Would be cool if they somehow ended up building a small biological wetlands in the middle of the desert. Kudos to all involved as we do not have many real beaver here. Maybe a positive story about Game and Fish, the rehab center, the ranch owners, the other beavers and the general public overall? Not enough beavers to cause a nuisance I would think like in other parts of the country. But I could be wrong. Anybody? Seems like a lot of very strong opinions on here lately.

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I know a buddies family has a problem with them in Greer. They have been issued to take of them. I ran one over in the road last year on a deer hunt up by Roosevelt.

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I guess that I have no experience with them so I definitely do not have any preconceived notion about them. Just always thought beavers in the desert were pretty interesting. In the desert they keep the water on the surface instead of letting it go underground, thus making the water accessible to the entire animal ecosystem. But what the heck do I know!

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DOn't know much about them myself. I watched a documentary of the Yellowstone area Beaver. They filmed a full year in the life of a Beaver and had an underwater camera. It was very interesting. I know they can cause a considerable amount of damage to the tree's and vegetation in a given area, but that's what Beavers do to survive. I would think any desert area beaver would need much water, no encroachment by man to excel in it's enviroment. But I don't really know.

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DOn't know much about them myself. I watched a documentary of the Yellowstone area Beaver. They filmed a full year in the life of a Beaver and had an underwater camera. It was very interesting. I know they can cause a considerable amount of damage to the tree's and vegetation in a given area, but that's what Beavers do to survive. I would think any desert area beaver would need much water, no encroachment by man to excel in it's enviroment. But I don't really know.

I just googled "year in the life of a beaver"

 

Wow, that was disturbing.

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DOn't know much about them myself. I watched a documentary of the Yellowstone area Beaver. They filmed a full year in the life of a Beaver and had an underwater camera. It was very interesting. I know they can cause a considerable amount of damage to the tree's and vegetation in a given area, but that's what Beavers do to survive. I would think any desert area beaver would need much water, no encroachment by man to excel in it's enviroment. But I don't really know.

I just googled "year in the life of a beaver"

 

Wow, that was disturbing.

 

I can only imagine!

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Pbs has a great documentary called 'leave it to beavers'. They showed a place in Nevada where a couple of beavers had turned a desert sand wash into an incredible green oasis. It was amazing. Apparently there is some sort of initiative to reintroduce them throughout the west. Very interesting animals

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I've seen them downstream of Holly Lake in the White Mountains, in Cherry Creek unit 23, at Lake Powell and in the Colorado river on Lake Mohave and at Laughlin, plus several other places I won't mention.

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