Who knew there were Beaver in N/W Arkansas?

More accurately, beaver houses are called lodges. The dams are built to raise water levels to protect their lodges and in colder environments to prevent ice blocking their lodge entrances. They don’t dam up water that is sufficiently deep.

They should just trap them. They’re easy to trap and their fur is awesome. It’s soft and shiny and makes great garments. They can always sell the furs too if they want to make a bit of money.

But still, explosives would be cool. Do it when the beavers go out to lunch or something.

Were armadillos eaten during the Depression, leprosy and all?

We even have a few beaver and the occasional otter in the Chicago river. They tend to stay away from the noisy areas but if you go North or South of the loop you’ll see signs of them.

Thanks, I just had it stuffed.
I got beavers on my state flag, beavers on my college teams, beavers everywhere.

I even have one right outside. A year round stream with willows growing in it runs through my couple acres. The guy moves upstream to some ponds when water gets low during the dry season and moves back down once the wet starts, which is right about now. I kind of like him. He eats and clears the willows, keeping my gully clear, clears out the blackberries by eating the root balls they have, and helps capture new soil with his dams.

The only time he has pissed me off was when he took my pear tree. And I mean took it. I had been nurturing it for several years and it was about 5 inches in diameter, until one day it was just gone and a one foot stump was left. No sign of the tree, no branches, no stems no seeds, it was all gone except for that stump. I don’t know what he did with it.

He must have really liked the taste of pear wood.

Once I was walking near a canal in the middle of the night and heard heavy breathing near this little dock. I turned on the flash on my phone and found a dripping wet beaver, baring its huge front teeth. They actually are pretty scary looking up close, I backed away slowly, that damn thing freaked me the hell out.

I don’t blame the beavers, we are encroaching on their habitats, but I didn’t realize just how aggressive and territorial they can be.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2WibqDBcO2o

The persistence of the beaver in the video is quite illuminating

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZE06cQ-7YVs

As much as I love animals, I’d probably be (illegally) hunting beaver after that.

Relatives in Oklahoma have a nice little pool on their property where I would be growing water plants. A beaver ate a little willow tree. My Uncle seemed to not be angry about it. I would be truly hacked off.

They’re not protected in many places, but most people trap them.

Hunting season in Arkansas: Sunrise, Sept. 1, 2018-Sunset, March 31, 2019.

I know possums were eaten. Armadillos are hard to shoot. They roll up and the armor is hard. You have to have a long gun, unless you can’t hit the head before it goes into survival mode.
Beaver lodges are under their dams, in my understanding. I am not knocking on their little door to see what level they are habitating, though. Mr.Wrekker has torn many apart trying to move them on. He’s seen into them and tells me they live under the water level, dry and cozy. Home sweet home.