Christopher Lawton, Spiegel
December 2009
Beavers get tired too. For that reason, Berlin has fashioned a mini rest stop for the furry animals to take a break as they swim through the city in the Spree River. It marks a significant change since the times when Berliners saw beavers as a tasty treat during Lent.
Swimming the Spree River in Berlin can be exhausting.
So exhausting, in fact, that even beavers are having trouble making it. For
years these furry animals, known to be excellent swimmers, have met their
end from sheer exhaustion or the sharp blades of a ship's propeller as
they've tried to swim through Berlin. Now with just 30 beavers left, the
city has given them their own place on the river. On Wednesday, Berlin
officially opened the steel platform on the Spree, on which beavers can come
out of the water and rest.
"It's a gas station for beavers. When you build a 100-kilometer long
autobahn, one must also be able to refuel. This is the same principle," Derk
Ehlert, wild animal expert at Berlin's Senate Department for Urban
Development, told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
A New Home
The beaver resting stop is part of a larger effort, under German law, to
protect natural wildlife habitats in German cities and states. Over five
years ago, Berlin noticed that some beavers had elected to make the city
their home, even though there is a beaver colony ensconced just 3 kilometers
(1.8 miles) north of the city, Ehlert said. At the same, beavers were also
leaving the city waters and falling victim to cars and other dangers. They
tended to be young, two-to-three year old beavers, who had been separated
from their families and were looking for a new home, Ehlert said.
"We want the beavers to be able to swim through Berlin. We don't want them
to build big lodges in Tiergarten," he said.
Roughly 100 years ago, beavers were native in Berlin, but they were
eventually hunted and killed to near-extinction for their fur or meat. In
particular, beaver was a popular Easter dish. During Lent, the period of
fasting prior to Easter, people were forbidden from eating meat. The church,
however, had declared that beaver, because it lives in water, was not an
animal but a fish, making them an attractive meal.
Resting
Today, beavers have returned to Berlin, thanks to improvements to water
quality and river banks. This first resting place is just the start, Ehlert
says. In the coming years, he hopes to build another platform further north.
Animal lovers will eventually be able to see the beavers as they walk along
the Spree, although Erlert warns that the animals have not yet discovered
the platform, located near Berlin's Ostbahnhof train station. It could take
between three and five years for the beavers to discover and then become
comfortable using the platform as a resting spot.
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