HawkinsHollow
Veteran Member
I have about 14 acres of bottom land with a 4 acres pond, pond has resident beavers. I don't mind them being there as they do not seem to eat the trees on my property. I have only seen 1 tree that had noticeable beaver damage on all 14 acres. So until that changes I will try to live in harmony with them. I do mind their small dam upstream of my pond that floods out 3 or 4 acres 1 to 2 feet deep. So the fight has begun. I installed a homemade beaver deceiver yesterday. It is about as dry as it could possibly be around here which made installation much easier.


I understand the pipes should be at least 3 or 4 feet longer but it is what I had on hand so we'll see how it works. The outflow should be underneath the normal winter level of my pond so there should not be much sound of running water. If there is I can always add a 90 deg. to get it there. The land is unusable in it's flooded state, I look forward to seeing how this works. Up until this spring there was no easy access to this area, therefore, it was very hard to monitor so it was just easier to let them do their thing. Now I can ride my 4 wheeler or tractor right to the spot, and I want my land back. So I will be closely monitoring the situation and will be ramping up my defense according to how things pan out. Defensive connibear traps are not completely out of the question.
As a side note, I am considering harvesting a few beavers per year for their pelts. In Georgia there is no closed season on beaver and you can trap or shoot them day or night. Populations are exploding due to a lack of predation and trapping This bottomland is along a medium sized creek with beaver ponds all along it's length so I think there is a rather large beaver population, more than likely too large. There are at least 3 or 4 lodges within a mile of my property. I think one could harvest a couple beavers and not put a dent in the population considering each female has an average of 4 kits. I have read quite a bit on the subject and most people consider it too much work. But I might try it until it becomes tiresome and too much work. By then I'll have a nice pile of pelts to play with.


I understand the pipes should be at least 3 or 4 feet longer but it is what I had on hand so we'll see how it works. The outflow should be underneath the normal winter level of my pond so there should not be much sound of running water. If there is I can always add a 90 deg. to get it there. The land is unusable in it's flooded state, I look forward to seeing how this works. Up until this spring there was no easy access to this area, therefore, it was very hard to monitor so it was just easier to let them do their thing. Now I can ride my 4 wheeler or tractor right to the spot, and I want my land back. So I will be closely monitoring the situation and will be ramping up my defense according to how things pan out. Defensive connibear traps are not completely out of the question.
As a side note, I am considering harvesting a few beavers per year for their pelts. In Georgia there is no closed season on beaver and you can trap or shoot them day or night. Populations are exploding due to a lack of predation and trapping This bottomland is along a medium sized creek with beaver ponds all along it's length so I think there is a rather large beaver population, more than likely too large. There are at least 3 or 4 lodges within a mile of my property. I think one could harvest a couple beavers and not put a dent in the population considering each female has an average of 4 kits. I have read quite a bit on the subject and most people consider it too much work. But I might try it until it becomes tiresome and too much work. By then I'll have a nice pile of pelts to play with.
Last edited: