Stuff You Should Know - Selects: Beavers: Tail Slapping Fun
Episode Date: December 2, 2023Beavers are in fact, very busy. They're builders and solid family members, husbands and wives. Learn all about N America's largest rodent in this classic episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privac...y information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm Daniel Tosh, host of new podcast called Tosh Show.
I'll be interviewing people that I find interesting, so not celebrities.
And certainly not comedians.
We'll be covering topics like religion, travel, sports, gambling.
But mostly, it will be about being a working mother.
If you're looking for a podcast that will educate and inspire,
or one that will really make you think, this isn't the one for you.
Listen to Tosh Show in the i I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy
is the greatest murder mystery in American history.
That's Rob Breiner, Rob called me,
so would Ed O'Brien and asked me what I knew
about this crime.
Well, ask who had the motive to assassinate a sitting president.
Then we'll pull the curtain back on the cover-up.
The American people need to know the truth.
Listen to Who Killed JFK on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Everyone, it's Josh and for this week's Selected,
I've chosen our October 2020 episode on Beaverts you get your podcasts. Cascading Effect, a positive one too, on the ecosystems that they move into.
So, behold and enjoy the Beaver!
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of I Heart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryan over
there and there's Jerry somewhere and this is stuff you should know. The orange insiders
edition. No. Thought you were going to make a bad naked gun joke. No. No, it did run through
my head over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over again.
It's hard though when you're at our age.
Yeah.
And you saw those movies.
For sure.
Yeah.
Dumb joke though.
Yeah, well, I mean, it's a naked gun joke for Pete's sake.
Come on.
So this kind of ties in, I think, a little bit with our porcupine episode, and that beavers are, you know,
they're porcupine-esque in some ways.
I think it ties in even more to our wetlands episode,
which gave birth to the idea for this episode, you know?
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, I'm pretty excited about this one.
I think beavers are about as great as it gets
because they're so studious
and they also bend the world to their will.
They shape things the way that they want them.
And I like that about them.
Yeah, and I also love their familial aspects.
Yeah, which we'll get to all this stuff,
but what we're talking about is the largest rodent
in North America, which really demeans them, I guess, but yes.
Rodent's such a, it's not a bad word.
There's so many great rodents.
Who?
Beavers, porcupines.
What else?
Squirrels.
I know you have a thing with squirrels, but.
Well, I know I like squirrels.
Now, Momo and I, and Numi sometimes comes with us
to chase squirrels across the street in the park and feed them peanuts.
We give them peanuts as like to kind of buy them off
after mo chases them up a tree.
But the squirrels across the way will actually come to you
and eat peanuts out of your hand.
So I'm kind of on squirrels now,
Momo loves squirrels.
Chipmunks, mice.
Chipmunks too.
Yeah, the rod Chipmunks too.
Yeah, the rodents are okay, Chuck.
I think there are fewer terrible rodents
and the only ones I can think of that are terrible
are those scary New York City sewer rats.
Oh yeah.
Okay, so rodents are all right up with rodents,
I guess, with the rodents.
Rabbits?
And I don't think they're rodents.
They are, you like a hamster? Sure, hamsters. I don't think they're rodents. Oh, they are.
You like a hamster?
Sure, hamsters.
I don't know if rabbits are rodents, are they?
It makes sense that they would be, but it's what rodent.com says.
Okay.
Well, who am I to disagree with that?
But we're not talking about rabbits.
We're not talking about sewer rats.
We're talking about beavers.
And again, beavers are amazing, amazing animals.
And like you said, you know, it's kind of related to porcupines
and that there's what you could call old,
world, and new world beavers.
But there's really just two species.
And one is found in North America,
and one is found in Eurasia, and it's easy,
peasy, no fuss, no moths.
These are the beavers that are alive on the planet.
Yeah, so we've got the American beaver.
They weigh between 15 and 65 pounds,
which is very large.
If you've ever seen a large beaver in the wild,
it's not scary because you know,
and we'll get to whether or not they're dangerous,
they're really not.
But it's such a large thing that you're like,
wow, they're bigger than I thought.
Usually it has run through my head when I see beaver.
Yeah, I mean, 65 pounds is about 30 kilograms.
It's a big beaver.
It is a big beaver.
And I had to convert it to kilograms
for at least our friends in Canada
because beavers, they're national emblem.
They have beaver on their nickel, which is amazing.
Like, does just makes me love Canada all the much more, you know?
So for that 60 pounds, you're gonna be a couple of feet long,
23 to 40 inches long.
That's without the tail.
You don't count the tail when you're measuring a beaver.
The tail will talk a little bit more about it,
but they're anywhere from seven to 12 inches.
If you're Asian, you're about the same size,
mate, you can be a little bit smaller,
but bigger.
Well, you can be a little smaller on the,
I think the range is bigger.
Okay.
So you can be down in the 20s,
pounded wise, but up to the 70s, pounded wise.
And you're probably a little bit longer
and your skull and your tail are gonna be narrower
or your tail's narrower and your skull is smaller.
So, yeah, but that tail is what everybody understands
when they see a beaver.
Just like with a porcupine and its quills,
a beaver in its tail is, they're just synonymous.
Everybody recognizes a beaver because of its tail
and also the tails help make it cute.
Even though if you zoomed in and took a really close look of his tail. And also the tails help make it cute.
Even though if you zoomed in and took a really close look
at the tail, you'd be like, gross.
You think?
Yeah, it's galee.
It's got sparse, coarse hair associated with it.
It looks like a blackjack that some old timey like ruffs
would beat you up with.
And yet it's one of the most amazing appendages
any animal has, it's like a swiss army knife for tails.
Yeah, they're very useful in a lot of ways.
They obviously, if they're swimming in beavers,
by the way, can swim five to seven miles an hour,
they have little web feet, they can close their ear holes and their nose
holes and they can roll their film over their eyeballs.
Yeah, nictatating membrane.
Yeah, it's amazing.
So if they're going to be swimming, then that tail is going to be acting as a rudder.
And as a propeller.
It's also if they're on land, it's going to act as a little kickstand at times.
Yeah, when they stand up on their back legs, they use their tail to kind of lean against
to balance.
Sure.
It's a big one for sure.
They also, and this is a sure sign that you have frightened, slashed, upset a beaver,
they will slap the water with their tail in part to frighten you away to say, like, don't
mess with me,
but also to warn other beavers
because like you were saying, they're familial,
they are actually fairly social animals
and they live in family units.
So they would want to warn like,
you know, the wife and the kids back at the lodge.
Yeah, and here's the thing,
I spent a lot of time at a lake here in Georgia
and I have heard something which I've spent a lot of time at a lake here in Georgia, and I have
heard something which I thought was a beaver, tail smash, but I'm not sure because I didn't
see it.
I have seen evidence of beaver eating tree stuff.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And which we'll get to.
And one day when I was in the lake, I saw a mammal's head coming toward me.
And I don't know if it was,
we also have river otters.
So I don't know if it was an otter or a beaver.
But either way, it was a large head.
And even though I know that they weren't gonna
like come after me,
when that thing pops under the water,
you're just like, what, where's he going?
What's he doing?
Where is he?
Is he coming at me or not?
Were you swimming in the lake at the time?
Yeah, we'll swim in the lake.
And that's all this large mammal head, you know,
dunked under.
I could feel you.
And if it was, I'm not sure how long beavers can hold their,
or otters can hold their breasts,
but beavers can hold their breath for about 15 minutes,
which is pretty remarkable.
I thought I think it's remarkable too.
I mean, it really just goes to show like,
just how adapted
they are for life in the water.
And they are mammals so they have lungs,
so they need to breathe air outside of the water.
But yeah, the fact that they can hold their breath
for 15 minutes, that they have nictitating membranes
that cover their eyes like little goggles,
so they can see and work underwater.
They spend a significant amount of their time underwater.
In fact, they're most protected in water.
That's where they can move the fastest.
They can swim pretty fast way faster
than they can water a lot in land.
Sure.
And a lot of their predators won't necessarily come into,
especially deep water after them.
So when they're in the water,
they're in their happy place.
Most importantly,
Yeah, and imagine when they die for 15 minutes
and are swimming around, what do you think those fish think?
No, here comes a beaver.
Do they know or they just like, what in the world
is that big hairy thing?
I would guess that they, I would like to think they know.
I like to think of communities of animals or ecosystems just, they know each other.
Yep, they know each other, they know each other's foibles, they've come to accept one another,
you know, they have the things, but-
They're only things, but-
Beaver foibles.
They always kind of, you know, they, in the end that when somebody, you know, like a human
comes in and tries to screw things up, they'll all band together and, you know, raise money
for the community center so that the developer can't buy it. So if you are a North American beaver,
you can live pretty much anywhere in North America except for the desert because you want water
around. You're probably going to be near pond or lake or marsh or marsh, or swamp, or river.
Your Asian beavers used to live all over Europe and Asia, but they were hunted, overhunted,
because at one point in time, wearing beaver peltes and beaver hats was like really high
fashion.
So now they're only found in Germany, France, Poland, southern Scandinavia, and central
Russia.
Yeah, and a lot of those are because they were reintroduced to the areas.
I believe Germany had to have their population reintroduced because they were hunted to extinction.
And how many beavers used to be here?
Like 400 million?
That's the estimate is that in North America, prior to Colombian contact that they were, there were about 400 million beavers and
they were hunted down to near extinction, within the hundreds of thousands from what I saw.
And we're luckily held back from the brink. And when I say luckily, I don't just mean
for the beavers, but I mean for the planet as far as North America is concerned, because
one of the things that we are still learning, but have come to realize, is that the beavers are probably the most useful species
on the planet, because they're one of the few species that alters their environment
as radically as they do.
Yeah, what are they called?
They're a keystone species.
Keystone species. Because when they are present biodiversity thrives and when beavers are
removed from an area, biodiversity suffers. The presence of beavers makes life better
in richer for entirely other animals and species just because of what they do and how they do it.
All right, that's a great place to take a break.
And I say when we come back,
we talk about the two fundamental full crimes
on which Beaver Life is based, the damn and the lodge.
Okay. Hi, I'm Daniel Tosh, host of new podcast called Tosh Show, brought to you by I Heart Podcasts.
Why am I getting into the podcast game now?
Well, it seemed like the best way to let my family know what I'm up to instead of visiting
or being part of their incessant group text.
I'll be interviewing people that I find interesting, so not celebrities, and certainly not comedians.
I'll be interviewing my plumber, my stylist, my wife's gynecologist.
We'll be covering topics like religion, travel, sports, gambling, but mostly it will be
about being a working mother.
If you're looking for a podcast that will educate and inspire, or one that will really
make you think,
this isn't the one for you, but it will be entertaining to a very select few,
because you don't make it to your mid-40s with IBS without having a story or two to tell.
Join me as I take my place among podcast royalty like Joel Olstein and Lance Bass.
Those are words I hope I'd never have to say.
Listen to Tosho on the iHeartRad Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy is the greatest murder mystery in American
history.
That's Rob Breiner, Rob called me, so would Ed O'Brien, and asked me what I knew about
this crime.
I know 60 years later, new leads are still emerging. To me, an award-winning journalist,
that's the making of an incredible story. And on this podcast, you're going to hear it told
by one of America's greatest storytellers. Well, last, who had the motive to assassinate a
sitting president? My dad, 5JFK, screwed us at the Bay of Pigs, and then he screwed us after the Cuban Missile Crisis.
We'll reveal why Lee Harvey Oswald isn't who they said he was.
I was under the impression that Lee was being trained for a specific operation,
then we'll pull the curtain back on the cover-up.
The American people need to know the truth.
Listen to Who Killed JFK on the I HeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
My name is Payne Lindsay, and just like pretty much everyone else on the internet, I make
podcasts.
Throughout my career, I've had the chance to travel all over the place, investigating true
crimes, researching the unexplained, I've been able to meet some of the most truly interesting
people, and I've decided to sit meet some of the most truly interesting people,
and I've decided to sit down with them and pick their brains. We're going to talk about life,
death, unsolved crimes, and Bob wrote the cadaver note in his own words he had murdered Susan
firm. Why do they were so obsessed with dark people like that? It's maybe part of human nature.
The supernatural, there's something here, truly something going on. Our biggest fears, mental health, pop culture.
Just a adrenaline being on a film set is incredible.
And honestly, just whatever the hell is on our minds.
Wait a minute, you should be very happy, you want?
This is Talking to Death.
New episodes of Talking to Death are available now.
Listen on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, we're back. And there are a couple of things, you know, you heard Busy as a Beaver.
It's, I don't know if that's proven, but I think it is almost universally agreed that that phrase came about because beavers are in fact very busy and they work, work, work all day long
building their homes and building dams.
Their homes are called lodges and you've probably seen, if you ever been hiking in stuff
in America, you've probably seen a beaver lodge by a river early. It's a little dome, a little hideout of sticks and grasses and moss and mud.
Maybe you thought a local witch had built it?
Yeah, maybe it does look like a little, what do you call witch's houses?
Witch's house. I think there's a cottage.
Cottage. Oh sure, I think there's a different name.
A witch's house, there's a name for this? I thought so now.
I don't know. I don't know, sure. I think there's a different name, but a witch's house is a name for those. I thought so, no. I don't know.
I don't think so.
Witch house?
I'm maybe I'm thinking of covens.
House a day witch?
No, there's a word.
I just watched the witch, the movie again.
I think there's a word for it.
I love that.
That might be my favorite movie.
Ah, we did a movie crash round table on that.
By the way, it was really good.
It is a good one.
That's the guy who did the lighthouse, isn't it?
Yeah, Robert Newgers.
God bless that man.
I can't wait to see his biking movie too.
Oh man, again, imagine.
Okay.
So the Beaver Lodge is, you know, about eight feet wide,
a few feet high.
They're on the banks of these ponds or on lake shores.
They have, this is one of my favorite parts.
Many of them have a little underwater back door.
So it's like sort of a ski in chalet if you're snow skiing.
Yeah, which makes sense because again,
they spend so much time in the water,
but also protects them from terrestrial predators
because they can get into the water
and escape when predators like at their door.
Yeah, and you know, this is their nocturnal,
they don't hibernate, but most of this action's
going on at night.
And everyone pitches in the whole family.
I don't think we said yet, they live with their children
till they're about two.
And in a beaver lodge, you might find a mom and a dad
who are monogamous mates for life.
Yeah.
And they might have their three, two year old,
almost two year old children. And then they might have their three, two year old, almost two year old children.
And then they might have their little grandbabies.
Yeah, because when they have their babies,
which are called kits, which admittedly is not as cute
or it is porky pets.
No, but they're cute.
But dude, just baby beaver.
The poor press pause right now, everybody.
And go look up some baby beaver pictures.
Those little tails.
Oh my god, they have their cute.
So they have baby beavers. And one of the reasons why they're so cute is because they stick around
for so long or they stick around so long because they're so cute.
That's what I mean to say.
But they do, they stay as part of the family unit and help like work on the family lodge
and damn until about two and they wander off and then at three they start to mate
but they build their own lodge at age two.
And from what I've read, it's usually very clumsy.
It's not in the best place necessarily
and so they kind of learn as they go
but they also learn from their family unit first
which I think is super cute.
It is.
I think we should talk about dams though.
I mean the lodges are cool
and it's a great place to live if you're a beaver. But the dams is where they really,
that's where they get their their shining moment as a species that really helps out the
environment because they help create these wetlands, don't they? Yeah, so so a beaver will move into an area that's dry as a bone.
That's maybe cropland, that's maybe timberland,
that is not at all flooded.
There's no pond or wetland or anything like that,
and they say, this can be better.
And so they find a source of moving water, like a stream,
or a brook, maybe a creek, maybe a creek, something like that.
And they stop it up.
They build a dam and they build the stamps so that the water backs up behind it and floods
this area and turns it into a wetland.
And they do this not to urk humans or just for fun.
They do it because they're altering the ecosystem to better suit themselves.
Like I said, they survive much better when they're in the water, they move faster, they can work faster.
So they actually make this ecosystem into an aquatic ecosystem where before there wasn't an aquatic ecosystem.
And they do it all by building this dam.
And the way that
they build dams is magnificent in and of itself.
Yeah, so you know, you got your dam base, the foundation basically where you're going
to use mud and gravel that you get from the stream. And you kind of work together as a
family and with your tail and they're pushing, I say, we were beavers all of a sudden.
And you're pushing this mud and gravel up from the bottom of the stream.
And if let's say it's a place where the creek is running a little bit too fast and there's
too much flow, they're going to say, you know what, we're going to take these sticks,
we're going to pile these things up all along the bottom until basically,
it's like building from the ground up
until they're strong enough to stay in place.
Right, but they're so good at using their hands
and they're so strong, you said, you know, 60, 65 pounds
or about 30 kilograms, they're mostly muscle too.
They're really strong little rodents,
especially for being like herbivores,
they're like those vegan bodybuilders. But they can take, they'll take sticks and like plant them in
the bottom of this stream or whatever and start forming a lattice work that
they weave in between and fill up with mud to really stop up some, you know, fast
moving current.
That's the level of manipulation that they're doing. They're building a dam that they eventually
successfully back up the flow of water from.
Yeah, which is, I've tried to do that before,
and it's hard to do.
Yeah.
My buddy Scotty and I, we went camping once in California
and it was when I was young in the film industry, so there was a lot of time between jobs and we just decided to stay and keep staying and
I think we ended up staying for like 11 or 12 days. Wow. And
we wanted to build a waterfall next to our campsite, so it sounded better. So we spent days and days with sticks and big rocks and
trying to reroute and change the river.
And it was some of the hardest work I've ever done.
Imagine doing that at like 48 inches long,
and only 65 pounds.
Yeah, so they're not only building this thing up.
They got their little kits and their children helping,
like bringing up sticks and mud saying,
Pa, Ma, is this okay? And they saying, pa, ma is this okay?
And they say yeah, add it to the pile. And then once they're done,
they like, there's a periodic like inspections that go on.
Yeah.
Because they gotta make sure that it stays strong
because that current just keeps going.
And it's very easy to wiggle the right stick loose
and all of a sudden it starts crumbling down.
So they basically inspect these things
every so often and check it for leaks
and bring in mud and patch it up,
just like it's like a human might do.
Oh, I saw that they do daily maintenance on it.
One way to tell whether beavers are in the areas
to find their dam,
make it like a little minor hole in it
and then go back and look the next day
and if it's patched up, the beavers are around there.
Like and giving you the middle finger.
Right exactly like okay yeah we're here you've figured it out please leave our dam alone.
But yeah these things are like water tight for the most part or they allow very little water through or I guess from what I can tell as much water as the beaver wants through. They're very willfully, deliberately constructed structures that will turn a dry area into
a wetland.
And when that happens, one of the things that they use to build the stuff with are trees
around the area.
And they can, they use their teeth.
Those really, really sharp, strong teeth that I said are like kind of orangeish at the very beginning of the episode
and they're very they're orange because they have so much iron in them which actually gives them
that much more strength. Yeah, they're up to an inch long, they're super strong, they actually sharpen
as they know on trees so it's not like it'll dull their teeth out.
It actually sharpens them.
And the other thing they're doing
is they're eating that tree.
They're one of the few mammals,
that are maybe the only mammal
that can actually digest cellulose.
Well, porcupines can, too, remember?
Oh, that's right.
Yeah, they can digest cellulose
because they probably have a very similar kind of bacteria
that helps digest it for them.
But they digest a lot of the cellulose that they eat and it's really hard to break down
normally for mammals, though.
Yeah, but like you said, they're essentially creating these wetlands.
They're preventing erosion.
They are helping to purify the water.
Oh, let's talk about what the dams can do, okay, Chuck?
I mean, it's amazing.
It's like a little environmental coalition that
goes into the woods to make things better.
Yeah, so I think in the wetlands episode I said something like a beaver creates the equivalent
of a $5 million waste water treatment plan or something like that. I could not find that
again to save my life, but I think that was roughly it. They create this structure.
They create the artificial wetland.
And in doing so, it filters the water
because it slows the water down so much
that the stuff can trickle down to the bottom.
It turns a normal terrestrial piece of land
into a wetland, so aquatic plants come.
And they've also found out that not only does it filter
water of sediment and particles,
it also is capable of handling farm runoff fertilizer,
which is really pernicious because you know,
when all that fertilizer makes its way into water sheds
and wetlands, it creates algae blooms,
which suck up all the oxygen and kill off a bunch of fish,
right, which is a big problem.
They figured out that beaver dams actually work against that
by fixing nitrogen, excess nitrogen from fertilizer.
It prevents it from flowing.
Bacteria chomps down on it and releases it
as nitrogen gas into the atmosphere.
And the stuff the bacteria doesn't eat
floats down to the bottom, gets eaten up by aquatic plants,
which when they die, lock it into the sediment.
So this farm runoff, that's a huge problem as it stands, is actually mitigated by beaver dams
they've recently found out.
Yeah, and talk about just what kind of impact it has on who lives there.
I mean, it's basically like an invitation to nature that says,
hey, we got a good scene going over here.
If you're an invertebrate that doesn't feel like they have a home,
you're welcome here.
If you're a new species of bird that didn't think that you would flourish here,
time to change that attitude.
If you're a duck or a goose,
you can nest on top of our lodge,
because our lodge is super warm,
because it's full of beavers,
and you can nest on top of there and stay warm,
and especially if it's out in the middle of a pond
or something, you're gonna be safer.
Mm-hmm.
What else?
If you are a woodpecker,
and you're like,
all these trees are too healthy,
there's no insects in them.
Well, just wait, because flooded Timberland doesn't stand up very well to standing water, You are a woodpecker and you're like, all these trees are too healthy, there's no insects in them.
Well, just wait because flooded Timberland doesn't stand up very well to standing water.
And so some of those trees die off and they provide housing for insects, which in turn
provides food for the woodpeckers.
What if you're a moose, let's say, probably no good for you, right?
No, you're going to love this if you're a moose, so buckle up.
Because the beaver is turned it into a wetland,
it's now an aquatic environment,
and moose-like aquatic plants that grow
on the edge of like marshy areas.
So these plants that weren't there before
are suddenly there for the moose,
and it gets even better.
Because when the beaver family finally like is,
you know, moves away or they die off
and the whole thing gets abandoned,
eventually the dam's going to break
without regular maintenance.
And when it does, the place is gonna go back
to how it was before, but it's gonna go back
to better than it was before.
Because think about all that nitrogen
that was fixed in the sediment,
all the erosion that was prevented,
and all of a sudden you have a lush, beautiful meadow that deer can come eat on.
Yeah, it's pretty amazing.
Like, they help out all these animals and introduce all these new animals that can live together.
And then once it's done, it becomes a flowery meadow for deer.
They leave it better than it was when they first got there.
Amazing.
It is amazing. The problem is that
humans frequently have much different plans for those same areas and people don't
follow them. I see we take a break and we come back and talk about that after a break.
Like I just said, what do you think? Answer now.
Yes.
Okay.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
Hi, I'm Daniel Tosh, host of new podcast called Tosh Show.
Brought to you by I Heart Podcasts.
Why am I getting into the podcast game now? Well, it seemed like the best way to let my family know Tosh host a new podcast called Tosh Show brought to you by iHeart Podcasts.
Why am I getting into the podcast game now?
Well, it seems like the best way to let my family know what I'm up to instead of visiting
or being part of their incessant group text.
I'll be interviewing people that I find interesting, so not celebrities, and certainly
not comedians.
I'll be interviewing my plumber, my stylist, my wife's gynecologist.
We'll be covering topics like religion, travel,
sports, gambling, but mostly it will be about being a working mother.
If you're looking for a podcast that will educate and inspire, or one that will really
make you think, this isn't the one for you, but it will be entertaining to a very select
few because you don't make it to your mid-40s with IBS without having a story or two to tell. Join me as I take my place among podcast royalty like Joel
Olstein and Lance Bass. Those are words I hope I'd never have to say.
Listen to Toss Show in the I Heart Radio app Apple Podcast or wherever you get
your podcasts. The assassination of President John F. Kennedy is the greatest
murder mystery in American history.
That's Rob Breiner, Rob called me,
so let Ado Bryan and ask me what I knew about this crime.
I know 60 years later, new leads are still emerging.
To me, an award-winning journalist,
that's the making of an incredible story.
And on this podcast, you're gonna hear it told
by one of America's greatest storytellers.
Well, ask who had the motive to assassinate a sitting president.
My dad, the father, JFK, screwed us at the Bay of Pigs, and then he screwed us after the Cuban
missile crisis.
We'll reveal why Lee Harvey Oswald isn't who they said he was.
I was under the impression that Lee who has been trained for a specific
operation, then will pull the curtain back on the cover-up. The American people need to
know the truth. Listen to Who Killed JFK on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts. My name is Payne Lindsay, and just like
pretty much everyone else on the internet, I make podcasts.
Throughout my career, I've had the chance to travel all over the place, investigating true crimes, researching the unexplained,
I've been able to meet some of the most truly interesting people, and I've decided to sit down with them and pick their brains.
We're going to talk about life, death, unsolved crimes, and Bob wrote the cadaver note in his own words he had murdered Susan Furman
Why do they were so obsessed with dark people like that?
It's maybe part of human nature.
The supernatural, there's something here, truly something going on.
Our biggest fears, mental health, pop culture.
Just a adrenaline being on a film set is incredible.
And honestly, just whatever the hell is on our minds.
Wait a minute, you should be very happy once.
This is Talking to Death. New episodes of Talking to Death are available now.
Listen on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts. All right, so we love Beaver.
You love Beaver.
Everyone out there listening.
There's a lot of people who don't love Beaver.
Is that Beaver?
It is now.
Okay.
And the reason why is because if you own like a stand of timber, your plan is to eventually cut that timber down
and sell it for wood planks or books,
like stuff you should know,
colon and incomplete compendium
of mostly interesting things available
everywhere you get books to pre-order now.
There's things you can do with trees that you grow.
And if beavers move into your area
and they build the dam, those dams are effective. This isn't like a little puddle we're talking about. They can create
basically like lakes, ponds, like enormous wetlands. And when you have standing water over
timberland, those trees are not, they're not aquatic trees that you're growing there. So
they actually die. Again, remember that they die off in bugs move in and woodpeckers eat
the bugs. Well, if you're trying to make money off of those trees, you don't really want the
beavers to do that to your timberland. No, and I think how many tens of millions of dollars,
I think it was like $20 million a year or something. I think more than that, because I think I saw
Alabama alone suffered like $14 million in loss from timberland just Alabama from beaver
Damage and only that it'll it'll
Flooding for crops it can make
What was ordinarily a very stable bridge or road now unstable and cause damage to roads and stuff like that?
Yeah, from like saturating the soil that was holding it up, just fine before.
Yeah, the good news is, back in the old days, they would just, you know, they would just
call as many beavers as they could to get rid of them.
These days, and this is kind of a weird stat, but it says 75% of beaver human conflict
can be resolved without trapping or killing the beavers.
So I take that as in,
they will somehow move them along in a way that's humane.
Well, I don't know if that's even the case.
I think that more often than not,
the first question is,
is the beaver really causing a problem?
Or is it that there's beavers and they created
this wetland and it wasn't there before and you're taking it as a problem.
And that's the thing that I'm seeing that it seems to be like the new paradigm for viewing beavers as far as their relationship to humans.
It's like, really, what's the problem?
If it's, yes, they're damaging cropland.
Okay, that's a problem.
If they're killing Timberland, that's a problem.
If they've, if they're washing out a road, that's a problem. If they're killing Timberland, that's a problem. If they're washing out a road, that's a problem.
But if they just created a wetland
that wasn't there before on your property,
where you bought the property and it was dry
and now there's a wetland there that you didn't plan for,
is it really a problem?
And I think that's what they're saying is that
75% of the people who are asked that question will say,
actually, I guess it's not.
I'm gonna learn to love the beaver.
I love beaver.
Yeah, and it really gets my dander up
when I, this lake that I go to, the Facebook page,
there are people, people post like,
hey, it looks like I have a beaver eating on my trees.
And some of these people literally are like,
yep, I'll take care of that with my 12 gauge. And it's just like, you know, some of these people literally are like, yep, I'll take care of that with my 12 gauge.
Yeah.
And it's just like, you know, I've never understood the people
who want to move to nature to kill the nature.
Yeah, I know.
It's just, it's unnerving and I have seen some beaver damage
and I love it.
I welcome it.
So yeah, you eat all you want.
You would be one of the 75% who would say like,
you know, it's no problem whatsoever.
You probably wouldn't even say it was an issue.
You wouldn't even be asked that question.
You would just know from the outset
that it's not a problem.
I call that a beaver beavering.
Yeah, that's right.
Beaver's gonna beaver.
And so we know now that like,
they are a keystone species.
They're so important that it's great.
The impression I'm getting is it's kind of like,
no, it's not really a problem,
so you can't touch that beaver.
Don't shoot that beaver.
You're going to get in big trouble
depending on where you are for shooting a beaver
when it wasn't creating a problem,
which I love because they should be protected
because again, not just the fact
that they were almost hunted to extinction,
they provide so many really important services.
I don't even know if we talked about it,
there were two others chuck, they prevent flooding,
three others, they prevent flooding
by slowing the flow of water.
So things downstream from the dam
don't get overwhelmed as much.
Right.
The stuff in the dam helps recharge aquifers below,
whereas before there's just a little stream trickling over,
it was doing jack for the aquifer.
Now the aquifer is getting recharged on the daily.
And then the third one is they provide natural fire breaks,
which helps contain forest fires.
Yeah.
I have a feeling when we're done,
we're gonna be mad
because there were like three more things
we didn't think about.
That happens to me a lot and drives me nuts.
Here's some of the things that people do try and do though to mitigate their, what they
perceive is their beaver problems.
Yeah, no, because they do create some problems as far as human settlement is concerned.
They will use beaver pipes.
And this is basically plastic pipes that you put in a beaver dam to route that water
to where you want it, helps control the flooding that bevers can cause.
Yeah, it's like so long that the beavers like it doesn't think to go to the end of the pipes.
It just sees that there's something around its dam and it probably dams up around the pipe,
but that still lets the flow of water go through. Yeah, this is kind of cool. They will build a pre-dam if they want beavers away from a certain place and in a different
place.
They'll basically say, hey, look over here, we got this fence.
It's like a foundation for your new home.
It's kind of, you got 10% of your work is already done.
Why don't you just start here.
So they'll do that.
Yeah, the beaver says, hot dog.
And then another thing is to design there, well, there's two times of fences. There's the pre-dam fence that encourages them to come. And then there is another kind of fence to keep them from
building there in the first place. Yeah, those are called beaver deceivers. And they are,
it's just basically, so like a culvert is a frequent place that a beaver likes to damivers. And they are, it's just basically, so like a covert is a frequent place that a beaver
likes to dam up, and that's where it causes a lot of damage, because culverts are meant to help
drain water to keep roadways stable and that kind of thing, right? So you would just basically put a fence
radiating out from either side of the covert outward, at an angle kind of like in a V shape.
And then those two fences are connected
by another fence between the two.
So it's just basically like a triangle
that ends in the culvert.
The key is if you make those fences long enough,
I think 12 feet minimum or something like that,
the beaver is gonna be like nuts to this.
This just isn't even worth it.
I'm not gonna try to build a dam here,
or if it does start to build a dam,
it's gonna give up eventually.
And your culvert is saved without the beaver being hurt
or harmed, the beaver just moves on
to a different spot that it likes.
Right, and if you have a tree that you really love
that you see has a beaver activity,
you can wrap like chicken wire around the base of it
if you want.
There's also some special paint that you can paint on the trunk that apparently bevers don't like.
If you want to protect a certain tree, it's like the nail biting stuff all that.
Oh my God.
Somebody wrote in about that.
What they say.
I didn't see that one.
I think they were just asking like what it was.
I'm sure they still have it, but I don't remember what it was.
I believe, remember, Lee press on nails?
I think they had a sideline in that stuff.
I'm sure it was.
It's probably just like clear nail polish.
Yeah, but it tastes like garbage.
Yeah, that tastes really bad.
Tasty like what?
What, I thought it was like hot.
No, it was bitter.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, I wouldn't like that at all.
No, it was very bitter.
I don't think we mentioned the,
I mean, we should talk a little bit,
we talked about the kits, but they do live in large groups, they're very social, they're called
colonies, and they mate in the winter during the first few months of the year. The Eurasian Beaver
gestates for 60 to 128 days and have one to six little babies. And the American beavers just date from about 105 to 107 days,
again, one to four little kids.
And they are weaned around two weeks of age,
whereas the Eurasian beavers weaned
at about six weeks of age.
Right.
And so Chuck, I saw that beavers tend to live,
like you said, they were monogamous
typically. And so that they live about 10 to 15 years in the wild, which is so cute.
But you can also build a pretty, pretty respectable dam in that time too. And I think actually
the largest dam that they've ever seen is they think it is from many, many, many generations
of beavers staying and working on it in Alberta, right?
Yeah, it's huge.
And I guess everyone just got in on the party.
Yeah, they think since the 70s that some beavers have been
keeping it very appropriate.
Yeah, pretty much.
And those little kids, by the way, can swim about just one day
after they're born, they're already swimming around.
Right.
So like we said, I think that they are,
I think that they become sexually mature at age three.
And around that time,
they're going to start producing something called castorium,
or castorium, right?
Yeah.
And castorium is like,
a lot of people think that it's like the origin of castor oil.
It's not correct.
It's from the castor bean, I believe.
This stuff is like the opposite of castor oil.
It actually tastes and smells like really good.
Yeah, I mean, it's used.
The FDA says you can eat it.
It's one of those grass.
Remember, generally recognized as safe ingredients.
And the thing is, there's just not a lot of it.
It's very tough to, and it's a lot of work to go out there
and try and extract this flavor ingredient
from the beaver tail.
Right.
I think it says 200, about 292 pounds annually total.
So imagine it's expensive.
It is very expensive.
And you can still find in some places.
I think I saw a whiskey that uses it. Chanel's perfume, what is it called? Cor de Roussi,
I believe, it still uses it. And it's a flavor ingredient too because it's, like you're saying,
is generally recognized as safe, but it also adds like a vanilla raspberry flavor.
That's what it tastes like to humans.
And they think that there are some ice creams out there that still may use that, like old
time ice creams that use beaver castorium, like beaver scent.
That's what it is.
It's beaver musk.
It just so happens.
It's so gross.
That beaver musk tastes like raspberry vanilla to humans.
Huh.
Yeah.
But they were hunting for a really long time, which kind of led to this one myth, didn't
it?
Uh, the testicle myth.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Up until about the 1100s, people thought beavers ate or bid off their own testicles.
Mm-hmm. people thought beavers ate or bit off their own testicles.
And apparently this has its origins in ancient Egypt
in medieval Europe, it continued where I think
what they said was that beavers knew that hunters
were coming after them because of that castorium
which originated in their testicles.
And none of this is true.
I think their testicles, they don't even have hangers, right?
No, they don't.
They're located inside them, which automatically disqualifies it.
But also, so the beavers were basically saying like, no,
you can't have my testorium.
I can't have it anymore either.
I would rather bite off my own testicles than let you have them.
I guess maybe as a survival mechanism,
like they thought the Hunters would leave them alone
if they didn't have testicles,
but no, that's not true at all.
And then there's one other great fact, Chuck,
that I think you got to take us out with.
The, yeah, the Pope in the 16th century said,
you know what, that tail was pretty scaly and they sure are in the water a lot.
So during the fasting days, go ahead and eat that beaver.
It's close enough to a fish.
Yep, exactly.
Qualifies as a fish.
So you could eat beaver back in the 16th century, thanks to the Pope.
That's right.
As far as I know, it teased early if they were dangerous. Their not.
Beavers are very nice little fellas and ladies.
And if there is a beaver that attacks somebody, it will make the news because it's so rare.
And it probably means they're really sick.
Yeah, they, like all mammals, can get rabies.
But like porcupines, I get the impression that that's one of the few diseases you can
get from a beaver.
The thing is, is if they are rabid and they do charge at you, they can do some serious
damage with those teeth.
They can chew through three-foot diameter trees.
They can bite through your skin.
If you get too close to a beaver, it can have bad effects.
It's just, like you said, it's extremely rare.
But I saw at least one guy died from them in the last decade or so, right?
That was just bad luck.
So a guy in Baila Rousse was trying to get a picture of a beaver and got too close and the
thing bit him in his thigh and bit through his femoral artery and the guy blooded to death
from a beaver attack.
That's just bad luck.
He died from a beaver attack. He died from a beaver attack.
His family has to live like that for the rest of their lives.
Beaver attack.
There's been some other attacks too, but yeah, I think they just kind of give beaver's
bad name unwarrantedly, don't you?
Shot through the leg.
And you're too blame. You give beavers a bad name.
Goodness, Todd. Well, I guess that's it for beavers, huh? That's it. I'm glad we finally
got to do this one. Leave them alone. Yeah, let them do their beaver thing. Beaver in
like Chuck says. Beaver's going to beaver. If you want to know more about beavers, then
by God, you go find some beavers and study them from afar because they are nature's miracles.
And since I said that, it's time for a listener mail.
Alright, I'm going to call this braver angels.
Hey guys, listen to your episode on swing states.
You mentioned the dangerous level of polarization going on between reds and blues in America.
Oh yeah, thanks for reading that one.
You're welcome.
And I wanted to let you know that there's something
we can do about it.
There's a great grassroots organization
with a specific goal of depolarizing America,
called Braver Angels, which organizes events
to bring reds and blues together
to have real nuanced discussions about things they disagree about
and help us understand and respect each other.
That's great.
It is great.
I mean, that's quite a service.
Yeah, I would love to peek in on one of these meetings.
And maybe go to one.
Yeah.
They're doing a lot of online events now due to COVID and among other things,
just launched a campaign called Hold America Together to prepare a response to potential
election-related
conflict in November. Could you please tell your listeners about Braver Angels and help
keep our country together because America needs this. Love to all the reds and blues out
there. And you guys are great at what you do. Join the Braver Angels. That is from braverangels.org, a-b-a-r-a-v-r-a-n-g-e-l-s.org.
B-r-a-v-e-r-a-n-g-e-l-s.org.
That is correct.
Okay, cool.
That's fantastic.
Thank you, Christa.
And thanks to all the braver angels out there
who are trying to keep the country together.
Because, like Christa said, we kind of need it right now.
And it is brave.
It's daunting to step outside your echo chamber.
Oh man, it is.
And it's just harder and harder because the echoes
have gotten stronger and stronger.
So to hear something other than that,
it's just almost like makes your brain melt, you know?
Pretty neat.
All right, well, if you want to get in touch with us
to let us know about some group or
service the country or the world is in dire need of, we want to hear about it, you can
send us an email to stuffpodcast.iHeartRadio.com.
Stuff you should know is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app.
Apple podcasts are
wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hi, I'm Daniel Tosh, host of new podcast called Tosh Show. I'll be interviewing people that I find
interesting, so not celebrities. And certainly not comedians. We'll be covering topics like religion, travel,
sports, gambling, but mostly it will be about being a working mother. If you're looking
for a podcast that will educate and inspire or one that will really make you think, this
isn't the one for you. Lister to Tosh Show in the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy
is the greatest murder mystery in American history.
That's Rob Breiner.
Rob called me, so would Edo Brein,
and asked me what I knew about this crime.
Well, ask who had the motive to assassinate a sitting president.
Then we'll pull the curtain back on the cover-up.
The American people need to know the truth.
Listen to Who Killed JFK on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My name is Payne Lindsay. Throughout my career, I've had the chance to travel all over the place,
investigating true crimes, researching the unexplained, and I've been able to meet some of the
most truly interesting people, and I've decided able to meet some of the most truly interesting people
And I've decided to sit down with them and pick their brains. We're going to talk about life, death,
Unsolved crimes, the supernatural, there's something here, truly something going on, and honestly just whatever the hell is on our minds.
Wait a minute, you should be very happy, you want?
This is talking to death. New episodes of Talking to Death are available now. You want?