Torrential rain damages our fake beavers dams

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October 2023

It’s been a wet and windy few weeks here in Scotland since we finished building our fake beaver dams. Rob visited the site at the end of September and was pleased to report that the dams were standing up well to the increased flow and were already pushing the extra water out onto the local floodplain.

However, anyone who has been following the UK news will know that things went from wet and windy to downright stormy over the last few weeks. With torrential downpours seeing 1 month of rainfall falling in just 24 hours over the weekend of the 7th October, we’re sad to say the dams at Glassie couldn’t stand up to these extreme flows and have largely been washed away. Fear not, like many of our wild beaver counterparts, we will not be deterred and will be rebuilding the dams to be stronger and more durable than before.

For our first set of dams, we tried to keep them as natural as possible, but without a beaver there to be constantly adapting the dam to the changing flow, we’re going to need some subtle manmade reinforcements to increase the resilience of the next set of dams. We’re still searching through the literature, conferring with our project partners Julian and River Revivers, and chatting with experts in the field to find the most sympathetic way of reinforcing the dams, but we are currently exploring the potential of earth anchors, securing tree trunks into the banks to anchor the dam and adding a wicker weave for stability.

With Storm Babet hitting recently and El Nino conditions making further rainfall and storms highly likely this winter, we will begin repairs in the early spring once lower flow rates have returned.

flooded area in Glassie farm