Repelling / Deterring Beavers

   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #21  
Devastated is an interesting word choice. Wonder how many critters benefit from that beaver pond, as well as how many types of plants grow in the opened area?
At 8000 feet elevation, not many plants can flourish. Only time there is no snow on the ground is generally July through September (county tries to have the snow plowed off the roads by the 4th of July). Wildlife moves down out of the snow during those months. In Nevada, we need all the trees we can get, and trees do fine at elevation. The lack of trees is why it is almost impossible to get a woodcutting permit.
 
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   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #22  
Beavers can't help cutting trees. God created them with constantly growing cutter teeth. They must continually use them to prevent overgrowth. So they are compelled to do so. There's no logistical gain for a beaver to cut down a large tree at random. They simply can't help it.

With that said, I'm not defending beavers and their damaging ways. Humans being the superior species simply have to control it where necessary.
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #23  
Beavers can't help cutting trees. God created them with constantly growing cutter teeth. They must continually use them to prevent overgrowth. So they are compelled to do so. There's no logistical gain for a beaver to cut down a large tree at random. They simply can't help it.

With that said, I'm not defending beavers and their damaging ways. Humans being the superior species simply have to control it where necessary.
Exactly. Beaver are also one of many species which thrives because of human activity. Their favorite tree is aspen, which is a pioneer species enhanced by human activity.
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers
  • Thread Starter
#25  
All you ever wanted to know Home - Beaver Deceivers
Wow - interesting concept. Not applicable in my case as my property is on a river that the state controls and they would blow a gasket if anything was placed in it. But I do plan on putting in some ponds and have bookmarked that link.
Thanks
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #26  
Placing a small piece of Lead just behind the ear or between the eyes is a sure way. Use a rifle to put it there
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #27  
I have tried discussing with them their dining habits to see if we could reason a solution. They refused.
I spent one winter tearing out the vent tube of the hut to discourage them and it kinda worked. But they would rebuild overnight and I would have a bigger one to tear out most every day. Eventually they moved, but bank beavers on a river are hard to trap. As another pointed out, my eventual negotiation tactic was .17 HMR.
I have never heard of any successful repellents: I used coyote urine, gasoline, diesel [ before it was so wicked expensive], wood ashes and a number of other items to make the hut unappealing. They had only temporary effects.
Good luck! Success sounds like BANG ;)
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #28  
like many have said, you can catch beavers even if its frozen. You will be at bay for the winter until next year, they don't cut trees during the winter months ... the best repellant is to trap them and far upstream and downstream ... if adjacent populations are present, they will always comeback. I am not aware of any repellant that would last or work other than eliminating their food but that would defeat your purpose.
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #29  
A somewhat humorous beaver story happened near here about 10 years ago. Not funny to the land owner or the beaver though.

A beaver dam was constructed on a stream which flooded a small business parking lot. The owner talked to the fish & wildlife commission and was told he couldn't trap the beaver or disturb the dam since the area was protected wetland. His only recourse was to build a dyke and raise the level of his lot. The construction, permit and environmental study costs would have bankrupt the business.

A mysterious explosion occurred about a month later in the middle of the night when someone dynamited the dam. The business owner was conveniently out of town at the time. He was heavily fined anyway but took it to court. The suit lasted for years but the business owner eventually prevailed. His legal fees were far less than the fine or the construction costs which would have been necessary to fix the problem.

Thankfully, the beaver never rebuilt the dam and moved on.
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #30  
And if he prevailed in court, the prosecution would have had to pay ALL of his legal fees.
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #31  
I've got real problems with beavers too. One dam is 10' high and over 100' long. last month caught a couple. I made a dam breaker that you can hook to your tractor (and work from a distance). I'm on the third version and it's doing pretty well on smaller dams.
 

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   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #32  
Seems like the city of Denver had a beaver problem years ago. They found that killing or moving the beavers just freed up space for new beavers to move into that territory.
Their solution was to spay female beavers to prevent them from having pups. The beavers are territorial, so the spayed females would keep other beavers from moving in and creating more beavers.
The fix didn't remove all beavers, but kept them down to a manageable level. But unless you are a veterinarian, this method is probably not feasible for the average guy.

New Mexico suggest this. Not as much fun as the $.50 solution (which with current ammo prices, is probably the $1 solution).
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #33  
Howdy this is definitely off topic but I thought I would see if some of the smart folk on here could give me some advice. I live in Northern Utah and have acreage on the Weber River. We had a beaver family that did enormous damage to our cottonwood trees a few years back (prior to my buying the land). I had them trapped and sent off to beaver heaven.

I recently discovered that they are back in the neighborhood. It is to late to bring in a trapper as the river is already pretty significantly iced over so that will have to be done in the spring. I am wondering if anyone on here has had any luck with a repellent. I have read that hot sauce may do the trick but I have a very large river woodland area (at least an acre right on the river) so I wanted to get some feedback before I start in on this. They have already decimated two trees in a matter of a week or so to the point where I will have to fell them as they ready to go and are quite dangerous.

Any advice is appreciated. And, no, I can't fence the area it is to large.

Thanks,
Kevin
Ice over is the perfect time. Find the lodge and go to Rural King and buy 5lb of tannerite. Put it in a container and paint it white for good visibility. Place it at the lodge and shoot it from 100 to 150 yards. You blow the lodge and the whole family won't survive the winter. I blew up a lodge myself this year. Good Luck!
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #34  
My opinion is that shotting beavers is not practical at all ... one beaver house can have 10 beavers in it, and they are nocturnal so you only have a few hours at night and in the morning that you can practically shoot them and in most cases, you get one chance per night then it goes quiet because they get the message... that's without saying that shooting a riffle in the water is illegal (in Canada anyway) and dangerous because of the ricochet. Setting up traps is much more effective to eradicate them.
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #35  
Another option is if they have a dam retaining the water, break it down, so the water level lowers then the water in their tunnel will freeze trapping them inside the beaver house and killing them all.
 
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   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #36  
Howdy this is definitely off topic but I thought I would see if some of the smart folk on here could give me some advice. I live in Northern Utah and have acreage on the Weber River. We had a beaver family that did enormous damage to our cottonwood trees a few years back (prior to my buying the land). I had them trapped and sent off to beaver heaven.

I recently discovered that they are back in the neighborhood. It is to late to bring in a trapper as the river is already pretty significantly iced over so that will have to be done in the spring. I am wondering if anyone on here has had any luck with a repellent. I have read that hot sauce may do the trick but I have a very large river woodland area (at least an acre right on the river) so I wanted to get some feedback before I start in on this. They have already decimated two trees in a matter of a week or so to the point where I will have to fell them as they ready to go and are quite dangerous.

Any advice is appreciated. And, no, I can't fence the area it is to large.

Thanks,
Kevin
My .25c worth....and likely unpopular with you
1, If there is available food and from the picture it looks like there is.....the beavers will return again and again and again. They were there long before you arrived and will be there long after you are dust
2, IMO Let them finish their work. They are excellent fallers and not big on dragging wood to water. So the tree/trees will end up in or near to the river.... and then they will clean up the tree for you. The cotton woods will sucker and you will have an even more dense copse of cottonwood protecting your fields/land from river erosion should there be a heavy rainfall/flooding in your area. Beaver are great managers of water. If the tree is not going to fall on your house or any out buildings just let them do their thing
3, Looking at the price of a beaver pelt in Utah [10-25$ per in 21/22] you will be paying by the hour maybe with milage for an ongoing and losing battle trying to eradicate beaver in your neighbourhood
Food for thought
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #38  
We find beavers move in and make a nice dam, then a few years later they move up of down stream. Might not help the OPer but today, we just wait them out.
Yep. They come and go in the creek that goes thru my farm.
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #39  
We find beavers move in and make a nice dam, then a few years later they move up of down stream. Might not help the OPer but today, we just wait them out.
yes, the reason is because the food ran out/ got too far to haul out, or because the area got overpopulated and disease got the best of them... beavers constantly push individual out of their colonies so if food is present and beavers are around, they will always come back...
 
   / Repelling / Deterring Beavers #40  
Howdy this is definitely off topic but I thought I would see if some of the smart folk on here could give me some advice. I live in Northern Utah and have acreage on the Weber River. We had a beaver family that did enormous damage to our cottonwood trees a few years back (prior to my buying the land). I had them trapped and sent off to beaver heaven.

I recently discovered that they are back in the neighborhood. It is to late to bring in a trapper as the river is already pretty significantly iced over so that will have to be done in the spring. I am wondering if anyone on here has had any luck with a repellent. I have read that hot sauce may do the trick but I have a very large river woodland area (at least an acre right on the river) so I wanted to get some feedback before I start in on this. They have already decimated two trees in a matter of a week or so to the point where I will have to fell them as they ready to go and are quite dangerous.

Any advice is appreciated. And, no, I can't fence the area it is to large.

Thanks,
Kevin
I learned a lot about beaver control methods in the posts here. Thanks everyone.

Just want to add a story about how tough and single minded beavers are. We live in upstate NY on a property which is mostly forest with one stream running through it. Our upstream neighbor is a large landowner with extensive swamp acreage and a large beaver colony. Every year, young beavers leave the colony and head downstream looking for a place to start on their own. There is only one flat area on our place suitable for a pond, and they always try a dam there. Lumber roads and walking trails cross that little valley, so we need to stop any dam building. We try to break the dam and trap the beaver in early winter.
Usually we can rip a 3 foot deep hole in the dam, put in Conibear trap, catch one beaver and the rest will move on.

Couple of years ago, we ripped the dam and put in the trap as usual. Came back two days later and the dam was completely rebuilt in the gap we had made.

We though the trap had been sprung and the gap repaired. When we dug down to the trap to reset it, the trap was there with a dead beaver in it. The others had rebuilt the dam right over him, literally the day he was caught in the trap. We had to repeat the cut in the dam and catch a beaver twice more before the rest left. Those beavers were building their dam back over the body of their friend while it was still warm. Pretty tough animals.


BG
 
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