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Originally published in our FALL / WINTER 2002-2003 edition
HEY ... WHERE ARE WE ? THE
MAP'S GOT TO BE WRONG !
They had
entered the BWCA at Crab Lake. After two days of some great smallmouth
fishing, they decided to venture out on a day trip. During the pre-trip
briefing, North Country had told them about a little lake that had some
pretty decent pike and largemouth two lakes over from where they were
camped.
Portaging away from their base-camp lake took all of about ten minutes. They
then traveled about a quarter mile up a small no-current stream to the
second portage. They reached the landing, gathered up their fishing gear,
paddles, life jackets, and lunch and started up the eighth-mile portage.
After a few dozen yards paralleling the creek, the lead trecker called out
“That’s the shortest eighth mile I’ve ever walked. They had reached the end
of the portage ... right next to a fairly good sized beaver dam.
They figured they would make a few casts before continuing on to their
intended destination. They put the canoes in the water and started to make a
few casts. Nothing! Eight people worked that pond, and not one fish. Time to
push on. Another short portage, and they were ready to lay into the promised
largemouth.
By lunch they had caught a few northens, some smallmouth, and a couple of
walleye ... but not one largemouth. The same thing after lunch ... no
largemouth. And another thing, the map was all screwed-up. The lake was
supposed to be figure-8 shaped. This one laid out more like a backwards-7!
Frustrated, they headed back to their basecamp.
When they finished their trip, they related most of their tales to us ...
including the lousy job we had done routing their wasted day trip for
largemouth. And another thing: tell the map maker to correct the map - the
portages were marked too long, and the lake didn’t look anything like it
showed.
Oh-oh. Something wasn’t right; the
maps are never wrong about lake shapes. Then it struck us “the two unusually
short portages, beaver dam, separated by non-productive water” ... A new
beaver pond had flooded the portage!
While Beavers have developed abilities as lumberjacks, and residential
architects, they are best when it comes to constructing water control
projects. Damming the flow of moving water is the strongest instinct a
beaver seems to have outside of eating and procreating. The sound of running
water alone spurs a beaver into action. Beavers will dam anything from a
spring to a fast-running stream. They are unable to harness the largest
rivers, but are very creative in using stream boulders and islands to anchor
dams that span larger and faster flowing rivers than one might think
possible.
Rivers and streams
have fluctuating water levels and also have a limited amount of safe
foraging habitat. Dams built on these water bodies raise the water level so
that streamside vegetation is flooded and food is accessible without leaving
the water. Stabilization of the water level allows a lodge to be built along
the river bank where it would otherwise be washed away.
While many people have seen beaver dams, few have observed beavers
constructing them. Beavers do most of their work at night and only dedicated
researchers, trappers, and amateur naturalists (versus canoe trippers)have
the patience to sit up after dark to watch Nature’s engineers at work.
One of the first activities of a colony of beavers moving into a new area is
to construct a dam. Most dam building occurs in the early spring (May here
in the canoe country), and late summer, with a couple of weeks of intense
activity in each season.
While human engineers select sites for their dams so that costs are low,
dams stability is high, and results are predictable, beavers seem to have a
more haphazard approach. Some beaver dams appear to be in an ideal location,
while others are located in an area where they are difficult to construct
and don’t provide maximum benefit. In these cases, there is often a far
better location near by. It is believed that beavers learn through
experience and that older beavers make better selections than younger
animals.
Beavers respond to both the sound and the feel of running water and often
choose locations for dams that are close to places where the water is
running fastest and making the most noise. On a number of streams we have
personally traveled, we have found dams in places where the river had
narrowed and was merely running noisily over exposed rocks.
Adults initiate most dams, but are aided in construction by all but the
youngest colony members. Beavers add sticks to the dam by pushing them into
the existing structure using their powerful jaw and neck muscles. The result
is a strong latticework that is very difficult to pull apart. Once a dam’s
crest is above water level, mud is added to restrict flow through the
network of sticks. The mud is usually daubed on the upstream side of the dam
so that the water forces the mud into the inner crevices. Eventually the
leaks are filled and the dam holds back almost all of the water.
As water backs up behind the dam, it floods a large area. Typically, the
water finds another channel and flows past the dam to the side. In these
cases, the beavers will build additional small dams to capture that water
flow and to increase the efficiency of their main structure.
There is no register of the largest and longest beaver dams, but local
trappers who wander the woods and hike back into the small impoundments to
set traps in winter bring back tales of some monsters. On our own travels,
we encountered a dam just off of Basswood Lake that was almost eight feet
high on the down stream side. In Quetico Park, we portaged around a dam that
spanned 100 yards from shore to shore forming one of those “not-on-the-map”
ponds. Years ago, while traveling The S-Chain, again in Quetico, we crested
a rise on a portage to find not a creek crossing as we expected, but a pond
several hundred yards across. Sure enough, the portage continued on the
other side of the pond. That pond is still there, and is regularly pointed
out during mapping sessions involving that segment of lakes.
The action of paddlers crossing over a dam, flood events, and the continued
force of water all eat away at the dam. Beavers regularly conduct
inspections of their work to patch leaks and shore up weak spots. Small
holes are repaired by bringing up mud from the bottom and by pulling
materials from the sides of breaks. Medium-sized breaks require more effort.
Adults often swim into the hole to block the flow of the water and pull
branches into the hole from the side of the break. They then back out of the
hole and push mud into the hole to seal it. Beaver dams can last for decades
with the descendants of the original builders caring for their ancestral
structures.
As for our party that doubted our accuracy
with the pre-trip mapping ... give us just a little room to maneuver
here. Beavers can dam a narrows in a few days, and if the terrain is
right, can flood a several acre dip in the topography within weeks. We think
we are pretty good with the map markings, but even we can’t keep up on every
beaver within 2,300,000 acres.
Besides, if someone really has to know what is around every bend,
they might try looking into the Jungle River Boat ride at Disney World:
listen carefully to the tour guide –- just before he shoots the attacking
hippo.
The Boundary Waters and Quetico Park form the only lakeland wilderness in
the world.
(You know ... the one set aside for the big kids.)
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