Time to celebrate! A decade since the River Otter was rewilded by beavers; and Claire Wright campaigned tirelessly to keep them

In reality it is likely to be longer than this “official” estimate but they certainly would have been “culled” without Claire’s tireless campaigning and liaising with DEFRA and Devon Wildlife Trust.

Even forcing Hugo Swire MP to take up their cause. – Owl

Beavers are thriving in Devon a decade on from rogue rewilding

Tom Whipple www.thetimes.com 

The beavers keep us waiting. By the side of a Devon river, over the course of an hour the fish jump, a kingfisher dives and an egret flaps. But for the two dozen people gathered at dusk — beaver o’clock — there is nothing.

Then it appears. There is a flash of brown under the water and a clatter of cameras above. It is furry, flappy and surprisingly graceful. The beaver is back.

Four hundred years ago Britain’s last beaver was killed — probably for its pelt. Today, though, beaver hats are out of fashion and rewilding is in.

Conservationists are calling for them to return across the UK, just as they already have, partly by accident, here. “We know from a huge body of research that these animals bring some quite significant and exciting changes to our wetland river environments,” says Matt Holden, from Devon Wildlife Trust.

Yet despite promises, despite Boris Johnson’s 2021 pledge to “build back beaver”, in England and Wales plans to reintroduce beavers have stalled. “Where’s the action?” says Holden.

To see why more beavers are a good thing, he said, you only have to look at what has happened in Devon.

No one knows how, but between ten and 15 years ago, the first wild beavers arrived here. At first, all there were were rumours. Like the nearby Beast of Bodmin Moor, the beavers were spotted in Devon in fleeting glances, glimpsed in implausible sightings — and dismissed as otters.

However, you can only ignore nibbled branches, grazed river banks and unexplained dams for so long. Soon, it was clear that beavers really had returned. How did they get here? An escape from a private enclosure? An epic transoceanic beaver exploration from mainland Europe?

Or was it rogue rewilding? Many suspect that conservationists, tired of the bureaucratic impediments to returning ancient species, frustrated by seeing reintroductions in Scotland, decided to circumvent regulations by smuggling in a pair of beavers.

If so, the strategy worked. Once there were beavery signs on the ground (and, in their lodges, under the ground), official beavers followed. Amid strong local support, beavers were taken from Europe, tagged and introduced to new habitats in Devon.

Over the course of a full beaver lifespan they have now been followed, photographed and studied and — in official academic reports — declared to be on balance a good thing. “The overwhelming weight of scientific evidence on the impacts of beaver reintroduction is positive,” Professor Richard Brazier, from the University of Essex said.

Also, we like them. Once, humans were the enemy of beavers. It wasn’t just their fur that we found valuable, it was their scent glands too — which were prized for their vanilla smell. Although, at the time they were confused for another part of the body. Medieval woodcuts show beavers being chased by hunters and gnawing off their own testicles to present to their pursuers, to save their lives.

As we reach the tenth anniversary of Defra-approved Devonian beavers, there is considerably less interest in their testicles and considerably more in their cute noses. There are beaver cafes, beaver merchandise, a healthy population of baby beavers and — on once straight and boring streams — ever-shifting beaver dams. And, each evening, there are people who come to spot them.

As 8.30pm approaches on the river — confusingly, it’s the River Otter — the beavers become bolder. One puts an ear adorned with a green tag above the water line and flops onto the bank. He nibbles at reeds. He masticates noisily. He gets photographed a lot.

Conservation researchers don’t name their animals. That kind of sentimentality is discouraged, in what is a serious science. So Holden only occasionally calls him Gordon the Beaver, before hurriedly correcting himself.

However charismatic Gordon is, though, the real economic case for his fellow beavers — if something furry and wet must be reduced to a spreadsheet entry — comes in what they do to the environment.

Twenty minutes’ drive away, cutting through the maize monocultures of a commercial farm, there is a little strip of woodland, too damp and soggy to be used. Here, there are also beavers. Holden stands on a dam: messy, bulky, leaky — and just occasionally patched up with stolen and nibbled maize.

When you manage waterways for flood protection, you build dams like this. It is hard work, said Holden. First you cut access, clearing trees for the HGVs. Then you move earth, bring in materials, and scar the soil. Afterwards, you have to maintain it.

Or, he said: “You can bring in a beaver … and they’ll go for it.”

The stream weaves and flows between pools. It makes wetlands and mudlands. It deposits sediment and runs clear. Most of all it takes its time. In storms four years ago, villages on an adjoining stream experienced once-in-50-year floods. Directly downstream from the beavers East Budleigh, the village where Walter Raleigh was born long after the loss of Devon’s last beaver, survived undampened.

Back on the River Otter, the light is fading. Gordon emerged from the underwater entrance to his lodge. This time, he is not alone. There is another beaver, younger than him. This time, they leave with purpose — with an intent to beaver away somewhere. But where that will be, the beaver watchers don’t know. Paddling together, they disappear into the Devon night.

New development proposals near your town – join the debate

In preparation for East Devon District Council’s new Local Plan, proposals for residential and employment development site allocations across East Devon will be considered at a series of public meetings throughout September.

Venue: Council Chamber, Blackdown House, Honiton

eastdevon.gov.uk

East Devon District Council’s (EDDC) Strategic Planning Committee will consider every potential development site allocation with dedicated time for residents, and town and parish councils, to make their views heard. EDDC has previously consulted on all sites under consideration either at the end of 2022 into early 2023 or in spring of this year and views expressed through these consultations are being considered as part of this process.

Each meeting will focus on certain areas:

  • 3 September: Exmouth, Lympstone, Woodbury, Exton (morning); Budleigh Salterton, East Budleigh, Otterton (afternoon)
  • 11 September: Sidmouth, Newton Poppleford (morning); Seaton, Colyton, Beer, Branscombe, Uplyme (afternoon)
  • 20 September: Honiton (inc. edge-of-town sites in Gittisham), Dunkeswell, Upottery (morning); Axminster, Hawkchurch, Musbury, Kilmington (afternoon)
  • 23 September: Strategic West End Sites, Broadclyst, Clyst St Mary, West Clyst, Whimple (morning); Ottery St Mary, Tipton St John, West Hill, Payhembury, Plymtree, Broadhembury (afternoon)

Details of how to participate in these meetings will be available on EDDC’s website. Meetings will also be streamed online via EDDC’s YouTube channel.

Agenda with easy access to the individual site selection reports can be found here

Cllr Todd Olive, EDDC Portfolio Holder for Strategic Planning, said:

“After three public consultations and years of technical work, we are now approaching the stage where we must make decisions about what sites should be developed under the new Local Plan.

“Deciding where to build in our part of the world is one of the hardest decisions we have to make. In many cases, as residents ourselves, we share your concerns, and your frustrations, about the process we are going through.

“However, we have little choice but to push on. If we don’t, the government have made clear that they will not hesitate to step in and make a Local Plan for us – with 28% higher housing numbers. To avoid this, we not only need to make tough decisions – we need to make them quickly. If we don’t publish a final draft plan in the next few months then we will have to restart the Local Plan process under the new, higher housing targets.

“Going forwards, we will be making a clear case to government about the constraints of our area and our desperate need for more funding for infrastructure. We are also working with South West Water to understand the issues with existing sewage infrastructure, and to make sure  that improvements align with the increase in demand from new homes and come forwards before new development is occupied.

“The new Local Plan has a target of 946 new homes per year. Through this new Plan, we will also be striving to provide more affordable homes for our residents, protect green spaces and biodiversity, and drive decarbonisation and job creation.”

Watch Cllr Todd Olive’s video message.

Mysterious tank in Budleigh has been removed

The Budleigh correspondent who sent in the images of this mysterious tank now reports that it was removed sometime last week. Since it has gone, it seems it was not part of the proposed pump upgrade mentioned by Susan Davy in her letter to Cllr Henry Riddell. 

Owl’s correspondent is pretty sure that it is a separation tank that might be used to separate debris from cleaning water. So perhaps it was intended to be part of the Lime Kiln sewage pumping station cleaning operation. This was scheduled to require night closures of the car park, but is now reported to have been postponed because of “ongoing operations” in Exmouth.