Showing posts with label Lodge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lodge. Show all posts

Monday, February 4, 2013

What Is Wrong With These People?


February 2nd, 2013. A few weeks ago we went by eastern swamp on Enoch John Road in Wilkes County, Georgia.
This is what the swamp looked like in the summer of 2011. And a closer view of the…

American Lotus (Nelumbo lutea) in bloom.

The treasure was a beaver lodge in the open pond just above the beaver dam.


A closer views…

It was sunny on Saturday and we went back to Wilkes County to check on another creek but drove by the swamps.  Road work had been done on the west swamp on Anderson Mill Creek to channel the water from the rain we had last week. mini-dam was gone but this didn’t affect the beaver lodge at the east end of the swamp.

The sight that confronted us when we drove down the hill on Satruday was shocking…


The swamp had been drained. The lodge was high and dry.

We walked along the ridge to the side of the swamp to get a better view of the lodge.

The western edge of the lodge was just above the water level of a channel through the swamp.

The back side of the dam at it’s highest point, and the…

area of water still behind the dam.

It didn’t take long to see where the dam had been breached…

The intact beaver dam near the road, photographed in December 2011, was intact when we saw it a few weeks ago, but now…


A section of the dam had been removed, leaving just a small streamlet draining through it. (the road is in the background).



A bulldozer had removed a section about six to seven feet long from the dam during the few days after the last rain judging by the freshness of the marks scoured into the side of the hole.

The destruection seems particularly wonton when the area has been in a relatively severe drought for a few years and the water impounded by this dam supports not only the beaver but other wildlife in the surrounding area. The dam was structurally sound and didn’t present any risk to the road just below it. Rather than destroying a large section of the dam down to its base, it would have made more sense to insert an overflow pipe into this section of the dam rather than destroy it completely. Hopefully, since this is prime real estate for beaver, they will repair the dam and return the swamp to its previous state.
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Identification Resources:
University of Georgia Museum of Natural History: American Beaver (Castor canadensis) 

Related posts:

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Beaver Lodge On Anderson Mill Creek Swamp


We found the swamps on Enoch John Road in Wilkes County, Georgia, in 2011 and drive by them every time we’re in the county. On the day we took the most recent photos of the beaver lodge on the eastern swamp on Enoch John Road, we discovered another lodge on the western swamp on Anderson Mill Creek.

We always stop on the..

bridge over the creek – looking west to the bridge - and take photos looking to the…

south..

A closer view, and…

north…

A closer view.

We stopped on the eastern approach to the bridge to photograph a…

Clump of Bushy Bluestem (Andropogon glomeratus) that had gone to seed.

We were wandering around and noticed something almost insignificant but not quite…

A mud dam stretching between two clumps of grass. This wasn’t there last time we drove along this road. The road grader had been through and opened up the vegetation along this stretch of road to allow water to drain from the upper swamp to the lower area.

This was a small dam. No doubt about it. The beaver in this area have built and extensive length of dam, more like a terrace, along the north side of the road to the west of the bridge. This small section was very similar.

So we started looking around and found, a little way to the north, another beaver lodge almost hidden. In this photo, it’s a gray mound just to the left of center behind the bushes. It’s there; you just have to know where to look.

There was no getting closer to it. Its in the swamp. The water is probably a couple of feet deep and the bottom mud is probably soft. We weren’t equipped and weren’t going to attempt to get closer. The only other option was to position the pickup in the best spot and climb up into the bed of the pickup and strain for a better view.

This was the best we could do but, clearly, it is a beaver lodge not more than approximately 30 feet north of the road.

Judging by how difficult it was to get a good view of the lodge now that the bushes have dropped their leaves, it would be impossible to see it in the Summer.
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Identification Resources:
University of Georgia Museum of Natural History: American Beaver (Castor canadensis)


Related post:

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Beaver Lodge On Wilkes County Swamp


We found the swamps on Enoch John Road in Wilkes County, Georgia, in 2011 and drive by them every time we’re in the county. These photos were taken at the eastern swamp on a tributary to Fishing Creek.

In summer, you’d never suspect anything. The view across the water is blocked by a large stand of American Lotus (Nelumbo luteo). Beavers are in the area but you think that they’d have their lodges further up the swamp. But no…  In the Winter of 2011 we got a better look at the swamp.

The water is impounded by a dam that is at least six feet tall at its tallest point.

A closer view…

And still closer…

And from the side…

Still closer…

It appeared that the dam had been undergoing maintenance. There was evidence of some new timbers and signs that fresh mud had been applied to the top of the dam.

 
When we stopped by in mid-December, 2012, the dam has grassed over completely. All that is visible of the long, thick trunk that was clearly visible in 2011, is the exposed part above the dam that has weathered.

At first we didn’t see it, but then we spotted the beaver lodge.

A classic beaver lodge in the middle of the swamp.

 In December 2012, it’s still difficult to see the lodge from the road

The lodge has weathered and some of the big timers that were on the top right-hand side appear to be in the water in front of the lodge.

We climbed up an embankment to get a clearer view of the swamp.


Views of the lodge in the distance. In the summer, the lotus field would block this view.



Increasingly closer views from this vantage point. Dead lotus leaves are clearly visible in the water around the lodge.

The icing on the cake would be to catch a glimpse of the beaver swimming in the swamp.
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Identification Resources:
- University of Georgia Museum of Natural History: American Beaver (Castor canadensis)