I returned to check my beaver tree camera I had set up and unfortunately all the camera captured was squirrels. Winter isn't really the best time to get footage of beavers felling trees as they're usually more active in the spring and summer repairing their lodges and dams and throughout the fall when they're stockpiling food underwater that they can access under the ice during the long winter, but I had hoped that since we've had a pretty mild winter here so far that they would still be active. I did a bit more walking though and found two beaver lodges and a dam. I've only seen one other lodge before and that was pretty close to this area but it appeared to be abandoned so to find two lodges and a dam with fresh sign is pretty exciting. I set up the camera on the smaller of the two lodges (not the one pictured) that was closer to shore and within camera range, but I hope to return either with hip waders or once the water freezes to put a camera on a tree next to the larger one and see if there's any activity at all this time of year. (Putting a camera on a tree in an area where many of the trees look like the one in my initial post doesn't seem the smartest but this one's in the water and is dead, so the beavers should leave it alone) I'm pretty excited to have found this place as I have only ever seen a beaver a handful of times and hopefully I'll be able to photograph them here this spring.
I returned to check my beaver tree camera I had set up and unfortunately all the camera captured was squirrels. Winter isn't really the best time to get footage of beavers felling trees as they're usually more active in the spring and summer repairing their lodges and dams and throughout the fall when they're stockpiling food underwater that they can access under the ice during the long winter, but I had hoped that since we've had a pretty mild winter here so far that they would still be active. I did a bit more walking though and found two beaver lodges and a dam. I've only seen one other lodge before and that was pretty close to this area but it appeared to be abandoned so to find two lodges and a dam with fresh sign is pretty exciting. I set up the camera on the smaller of the two lodges (not the one pictured) that was closer to shore and within camera range, but I hope to return either with hip waders or once the water freezes to put a camera on a tree next to the larger one and see if there's any activity at all this time of year. (Putting a camera on a tree in an area where many of the trees look like the one in my initial post doesn't seem the smartest but this one's in the water and is dead, so the beavers should leave it alone) I'm pretty excited to have found this place as I have only ever seen a beaver a handful of times and hopefully I'll be able to photograph them here this spring.
Comments
Post a Comment