Posted on Jan 10, 2026
Idaho once dropped 76 beavers from airplanes—on purpose
466
52
8
16
16
0
Posted 16 d ago
Responses: 3
Lt Col Charlie Brown this comment is probably going to bring me some heat. Before I got half way the article, the recall of a scene in the movie "Ben Hur" jumped out at me. The comment was made by Stephen Boyd's character Masala that living in Judea was horrible (paraphrased). The Charleston Heston's character Ben-Hur said, "not for Judeans". Chuckle chuckle chuckle
Well, 1. If there is a beaver problem that would be because they are in their natural habitat. 2. If they are pesky that is because they want their natural habitat back. 3. If their dam building capability is critical to land preservation they have a God-given sense how to protect their homes. 4. If they are important to the ecosystem that mean they live in their section of the world for a reason.
I am not anti human being or anti life, but this dynamic is saying something about man's stewardship over the planet and all of its' life. I live in town. But as the land mass in the county is disturbed and developed which destroys the habitat's, the animals are coming into the city. (Coyotes, deer, rabbits, wild dogs). The animal kingdom is fighting back, to keep their way of life.
Well, 1. If there is a beaver problem that would be because they are in their natural habitat. 2. If they are pesky that is because they want their natural habitat back. 3. If their dam building capability is critical to land preservation they have a God-given sense how to protect their homes. 4. If they are important to the ecosystem that mean they live in their section of the world for a reason.
I am not anti human being or anti life, but this dynamic is saying something about man's stewardship over the planet and all of its' life. I live in town. But as the land mass in the county is disturbed and developed which destroys the habitat's, the animals are coming into the city. (Coyotes, deer, rabbits, wild dogs). The animal kingdom is fighting back, to keep their way of life.
(11)
(0)
PO3 Phyllis Maynard
Lt Col Charlie Brown that is humorous, the reflecting pools need to lose the dams, but the beavers were there first. I believe the book was written in the 1980s "Animal Farm", was it written by George Orwall. It was fiction, then. I do not think it is fiction now.
(6)
(0)
PO3 Phyllis Maynard
Lt Col Charlie Brown this is the scene from Ben-Hur 1959 when Pontius Pilate complained about Judean climate
https://youtu.be/EB0iZlnBuxM?si=kLY-dCEhIf6BE1M7
https://youtu.be/EB0iZlnBuxM?si=kLY-dCEhIf6BE1M7
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
(3)
(0)
Sgt Jim Belanus
PO3 Phyllis Maynard - I think back to when I read animal farm back in the 60's it sure turned out to be true. As for beavers, I live in a remote area according to some people, 5000 live in the county. We have lots of wide open spaces and lots of ditches. Beavers are not a problem as long as they stay in the rough areas but blocking off a ditch along side a road is a capital offense. We have plenty of wild life and live with them, but when they become a nuance, them actions are taken. Drive our roads at nite, better keep your eyes open because you never know whats going to run in front of you. .
(2)
(0)
PO3 Phyllis Maynard
Sgt Jim Belanus I don't think WW3 and Aliens are the only things scratching at Earth. The animals are rebelling.
(1)
(0)
Lt Col Charlie Brown Beavers are America's original engineers! That part where the beaver is getting out of the box after the drop sounds like Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom narration! Of course, it might just be my poor hearing that makes it sound like that.
(7)
(0)
The repopulating of the Beaver is a fantastic success story. When I was growing up in Oregon, I dont recall ever seeing one. When I returned from California off active duty in 1992, they were all over the place in the Willamette Valley.
(0)
(0)
Read This Next

Wildlife
Animals
Relocation
