Ben Goldfarb
Author of Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter
Works by Ben Goldfarb
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Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1980s
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Colorado, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Colorado, USA
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If you're considering this book, you likely already have a curiosity about beavers. By the time you're done, Goldfarb will have convinced you that beavers can save the world!
Beavers are one of the world's most important keystone species. As Goldfarb points out, humans are the only other species who have played a larger role in shaping the geology and hydrology of our planet. Much of the erosion we see in landscapes across the American West isn't just because those landscapes are "naturally," show more that way—it is also because they've been denuded of beavers!
The story of beavers in many places is nothing short of genocide. Mirroring Colonial genocide of indigenous peoples, colonists have been a force for the eradication of beavers from the landscape. Beavers have made a stunning comeback in some landscapes, such as New England, but are still at a fraction of their historic populations across the globe.
There is a fun bit in the book where a beaver advocate teaches ranchers to install "analog" beaver dams. Once the ranchers get tired of maintaining the dams themselves, but fall in love with all the effects, the advocates tell them, "you know, there is someone who could be doing this for you..."
Goldfarb does a brilliant job documenting the countless humans who have dedicated their lives to beavers. It will take a massive movement to bring beavers back across our landscapes, and it seems as though that could actually happen! On the other hand though, there is still a lot of hatred against beavers, and this will need to shift if there is a possibility of their come back in some regions.
One of the tragic dynamics that becomes apparent in the book is that, once you lose a keystone species, entire ecosystem collapse, to the point that you can't simple reintroduce the species, as much of their context is no longer there.
This book talks a lot about the myriad ecosystem services that beavers provide, but it also gives a window into the livingness and animacy of beavers. This latter aspect is the one that I'm especially interested in exploring further.
I will note that Goldfarb could have given a more thorough treatment to the relationship between beavers and giardia. I grew up thinking that beavers were the reason that we can't drink water from upland streams in New England. Although Goldfarb spends a sentence explaining that you're more likely to get giardia from another human or a cow, it would have been nice if he had given this topic a more thorough treatment, since its impacts are so far-reaching.
The book spends a lot of time talking about the ways that "flow devices" can allow beavers and humans to co-exist. One omission from this section is the impacts of flow devices on the psychological and physical wellbeing of beavers (I can't assume that it is anything less than deleterious).
In conclusion, Golbfarb has written a glowing tribute to beavers, and anyone who cares about water, landscapes, and ecosystems would do well to read it! show less
Beavers are one of the world's most important keystone species. As Goldfarb points out, humans are the only other species who have played a larger role in shaping the geology and hydrology of our planet. Much of the erosion we see in landscapes across the American West isn't just because those landscapes are "naturally," show more that way—it is also because they've been denuded of beavers!
The story of beavers in many places is nothing short of genocide. Mirroring Colonial genocide of indigenous peoples, colonists have been a force for the eradication of beavers from the landscape. Beavers have made a stunning comeback in some landscapes, such as New England, but are still at a fraction of their historic populations across the globe.
There is a fun bit in the book where a beaver advocate teaches ranchers to install "analog" beaver dams. Once the ranchers get tired of maintaining the dams themselves, but fall in love with all the effects, the advocates tell them, "you know, there is someone who could be doing this for you..."
Goldfarb does a brilliant job documenting the countless humans who have dedicated their lives to beavers. It will take a massive movement to bring beavers back across our landscapes, and it seems as though that could actually happen! On the other hand though, there is still a lot of hatred against beavers, and this will need to shift if there is a possibility of their come back in some regions.
One of the tragic dynamics that becomes apparent in the book is that, once you lose a keystone species, entire ecosystem collapse, to the point that you can't simple reintroduce the species, as much of their context is no longer there.
This book talks a lot about the myriad ecosystem services that beavers provide, but it also gives a window into the livingness and animacy of beavers. This latter aspect is the one that I'm especially interested in exploring further.
I will note that Goldfarb could have given a more thorough treatment to the relationship between beavers and giardia. I grew up thinking that beavers were the reason that we can't drink water from upland streams in New England. Although Goldfarb spends a sentence explaining that you're more likely to get giardia from another human or a cow, it would have been nice if he had given this topic a more thorough treatment, since its impacts are so far-reaching.
The book spends a lot of time talking about the ways that "flow devices" can allow beavers and humans to co-exist. One omission from this section is the impacts of flow devices on the psychological and physical wellbeing of beavers (I can't assume that it is anything less than deleterious).
In conclusion, Golbfarb has written a glowing tribute to beavers, and anyone who cares about water, landscapes, and ecosystems would do well to read it! show less
I first heard about this book when I was reading the author’s previous text, “Eager,” about beavers. My initial response was, “do I really want to read a book about roadkill?” “Eager” is a book that will change your life; Goldfarb makes a bulletproof case for beavers being nothing short of revolutionary for the planets ecology and hydrology (and hence their restoration is imperative for the future of the Civilization Project). You can only come down from such heights, show more right?
Wrong. Goldfarb has done it again. He has taken a seemingly mundane, possibly even dry, subject—roads—and turned it into a riveting, scientifically-rigorous, gushingly-poetic, mournful, and vibrating tribute.
First, I should establish what this book is actually about: animism. In this case: kinship with our animal and insect friends—from turtles, to grizzlies, to Monarch butterflies, to ant eaters. I can only assume that for Goldfarb, it was a journalistic choice to leave this cornerstone of his narrative implicit as opposed to explicit. Why? Possibly because Western Culture has become so anthropocentric as to look down on people who recognize animals as other people. Possibly because the book would need to be much longer if it became not only an ecological, but also a philosophical and phenomenological text.
Regardless—I’m telling you now: “Crossings” will turn you into an animist, at least when it comes to our creaturely kin.
As a driver myself, this book hits close to home. If you’ve ever ridden in a car, let alone pilot one, you’ve inevitable come across the mutilated carcasses of your kin—in my community, they might be deer, possum, toad, fox, porcupine. In all likelihood, your usage of roads has been associated with your witnessing direct animal death (we’ll get to the magnitudes more indirect animal death in a bit here).
For me, the most poignant memory that comes to mind occurred in late Fall, 2010. I was driving home on rural road, late at night. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw something, someone, dragging herself. I slowed down and was able to identify a big doe whose rear end was paralyzed from a collision that must have happened only minutes ago. My heart immediately went out to her but in my mind I couldn’t come up with anything I could do for her. As I drove by tears started streaming by my face. I knew I had to turn back, regardless of the fact that I had absolutely no idea how I could help. Luck would have it that the car behind me also noticed the doe. It was driven by a man named Justin, who felt the same way I did, but who lived a mile down the road. He went home to get his gun. We found the doe down the hill a little ways, locked in down pine, her head resting on the trunk. Justin shot her in the head, and I spent some time with her afterwards, my hand resting on the soft, now bloodied, fur between her ears.
When I see roadkill, I can’t help but think of the kin that animal is leaving behind. I recall driving by a dead porcupine one time. Another porcupine had come up to her, placing his nose against hers. In a human community, when someone dies, a gap opens up in their community. The web of relationships now has a hole; they will be missed. I can only assume it is the same for non-human animals. As the deer gather around the stream in the evening for a cold drink before bedding down for the night, one of their number is missing.
I have participated in animal death over the years: slaughtering chickens, butchering fish, witnessing sheep, pig, and cow processing. Death is part of the cycle of nourishment and life.
What is so wrong about roadkill is that it is a profoundly unnecessary form of death. There’s a reverence that humans have practiced for tens of thousands of years, holding those beings whose lives we take in high regard. Roadkill is some terrible perversion of this cycle, “accidental” and nourishing only the world-destroying machine.
In Brazil, legal precedent has established that it is the civil engineer that designed the road and the governmental employee who operates the road that are liable for roadkill. Rather than seeing roadkill as haphazard occurrences between individuals drivers and doomed animals, it is seen as a systemic failure. There is a brilliance to this paradigm-shift; I would love to see such an outlook take hold in the States.
You’ve lively heard of the insect apocalypse. Depending on what numbers you’re looking at, somewhere around a third of insect are endangered (a much higher rate than mammals, amphibians, etc.—which are already catastrophically high). Goldfarb spends some time in his pages with the Monarch butterfly (whose Californian type has seen a 99% population decline in recent decades). When you see roads for what they are, it becomes apparent that they too are an apocalypse, an apocalypse for animals. I’ve heard about life in the partitioned villages of war-torn Syria: the checkpoints, the food insecurity, the armed guards, the razor wire, the inability to visit friends and family even one village over. Is this not what it is like to be an animal in a road-crossed world?
Roadkill is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the violence that roads perpetrate. They split populations, leading to lower genetic diversity (and ultimately less vital stock). They contribute to noise pollution, elevating the stress levels of animals for many miles around, and dampening the effectiveness of auditory communication and perception (in one study of birds, background road noise resulted in body mass declines because they couldn’t rely on their ears to alert them for predators, meaning they needed to spend more time watching, and less time eating). For migratory animals, roads might as well be cliffs—toss your defenseless body into the meat grinder, or abort the migration and face starvation. In one migration of mule deer in Colorado in the 1980s, 3,000 deer died along one road segment. Whereas for humans, roads connect, for animals, roads dissect and destroy.
There are a few practical bits of information as it relates to minimizing roadkill in the text: roadkill rarely occurs with vehicles moving under twenty-five miles-per-hour, and most animal death occurs especially at dawn and dusk, but also at night. And, thoughtfully designed animal crossings can work!
Goldfarb doesn’t go quite as far as Charles Marohn in his book “Strong Towns,” or as far as McBay, Keith, and Jensen in “Deep Green Resistance.” He doesn’t outright advocate for the removal of existing paved roads. Maybe he should. That said, he does report on the malicious racialized history of road construction (the ways in which they've benefited white communities at the expense of block communities), and some of these roads are being removed (often inner-city freeways).
Goldfarb’s breadth is magnificent. The book covers a history of roads and roadkill, going back to the suburbs of Persia and the turtles, crushed under the chariot wheels of the Romans. It covers the US Forrest service, and their countless millions of miles of forest roads (still ravaging ecology, even when a vehicle hasn’t set wheel on them for fifty years). You’ll read about “design speed,” (the speed at which you naturally want to drive a road, as opposed to the posted speed limit). You’ll learn about the extirpation of the deer from a majority of the United States, and their recovery. You’ll hear about the Salmon Superhighway, a massive culvert upgrade project in the Pacific Northwest that went all the way to the Supreme Count. There’s a section on the Carers in Australia and Tazmania who donate $6 billion of time annually for the care of animals who have been impacted by cars. You’ll learn about the sheep herds of Denali and the ten-minute gap between buses to ensure their safe passage. Page after page, chapter after chapter, Goldfarb’s words will evoke tears. I treat tears as an indicator of truth, and this is one of the trust books I’ve read in quite some time.
Having completed the book, I’m left pondering both the phenomenology and the philosophy of roads. In our human minds, roads are an afterthought—a way to get from point A to B. But for animals, they’re very much in the world of things, and concrete things at that. In a car, we experience a road in a wafting quality, as though we’re floating on a gust of wind. For animals, they represent sensory overload (and death): blinding lights, impossibly fast and hard gleaming beasts, oblivious to your agency and semiotics. One reconciler here are pedestrians. Civil engineering has been forced in recent years to account for the pesky two-leggeds, doggedly insisting that they too deserve a place in our infrastructure. Is the rest of Animalia all that different? Don’t they too deserve a place? show less
Wrong. Goldfarb has done it again. He has taken a seemingly mundane, possibly even dry, subject—roads—and turned it into a riveting, scientifically-rigorous, gushingly-poetic, mournful, and vibrating tribute.
First, I should establish what this book is actually about: animism. In this case: kinship with our animal and insect friends—from turtles, to grizzlies, to Monarch butterflies, to ant eaters. I can only assume that for Goldfarb, it was a journalistic choice to leave this cornerstone of his narrative implicit as opposed to explicit. Why? Possibly because Western Culture has become so anthropocentric as to look down on people who recognize animals as other people. Possibly because the book would need to be much longer if it became not only an ecological, but also a philosophical and phenomenological text.
Regardless—I’m telling you now: “Crossings” will turn you into an animist, at least when it comes to our creaturely kin.
As a driver myself, this book hits close to home. If you’ve ever ridden in a car, let alone pilot one, you’ve inevitable come across the mutilated carcasses of your kin—in my community, they might be deer, possum, toad, fox, porcupine. In all likelihood, your usage of roads has been associated with your witnessing direct animal death (we’ll get to the magnitudes more indirect animal death in a bit here).
For me, the most poignant memory that comes to mind occurred in late Fall, 2010. I was driving home on rural road, late at night. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw something, someone, dragging herself. I slowed down and was able to identify a big doe whose rear end was paralyzed from a collision that must have happened only minutes ago. My heart immediately went out to her but in my mind I couldn’t come up with anything I could do for her. As I drove by tears started streaming by my face. I knew I had to turn back, regardless of the fact that I had absolutely no idea how I could help. Luck would have it that the car behind me also noticed the doe. It was driven by a man named Justin, who felt the same way I did, but who lived a mile down the road. He went home to get his gun. We found the doe down the hill a little ways, locked in down pine, her head resting on the trunk. Justin shot her in the head, and I spent some time with her afterwards, my hand resting on the soft, now bloodied, fur between her ears.
When I see roadkill, I can’t help but think of the kin that animal is leaving behind. I recall driving by a dead porcupine one time. Another porcupine had come up to her, placing his nose against hers. In a human community, when someone dies, a gap opens up in their community. The web of relationships now has a hole; they will be missed. I can only assume it is the same for non-human animals. As the deer gather around the stream in the evening for a cold drink before bedding down for the night, one of their number is missing.
I have participated in animal death over the years: slaughtering chickens, butchering fish, witnessing sheep, pig, and cow processing. Death is part of the cycle of nourishment and life.
What is so wrong about roadkill is that it is a profoundly unnecessary form of death. There’s a reverence that humans have practiced for tens of thousands of years, holding those beings whose lives we take in high regard. Roadkill is some terrible perversion of this cycle, “accidental” and nourishing only the world-destroying machine.
In Brazil, legal precedent has established that it is the civil engineer that designed the road and the governmental employee who operates the road that are liable for roadkill. Rather than seeing roadkill as haphazard occurrences between individuals drivers and doomed animals, it is seen as a systemic failure. There is a brilliance to this paradigm-shift; I would love to see such an outlook take hold in the States.
You’ve lively heard of the insect apocalypse. Depending on what numbers you’re looking at, somewhere around a third of insect are endangered (a much higher rate than mammals, amphibians, etc.—which are already catastrophically high). Goldfarb spends some time in his pages with the Monarch butterfly (whose Californian type has seen a 99% population decline in recent decades). When you see roads for what they are, it becomes apparent that they too are an apocalypse, an apocalypse for animals. I’ve heard about life in the partitioned villages of war-torn Syria: the checkpoints, the food insecurity, the armed guards, the razor wire, the inability to visit friends and family even one village over. Is this not what it is like to be an animal in a road-crossed world?
Roadkill is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the violence that roads perpetrate. They split populations, leading to lower genetic diversity (and ultimately less vital stock). They contribute to noise pollution, elevating the stress levels of animals for many miles around, and dampening the effectiveness of auditory communication and perception (in one study of birds, background road noise resulted in body mass declines because they couldn’t rely on their ears to alert them for predators, meaning they needed to spend more time watching, and less time eating). For migratory animals, roads might as well be cliffs—toss your defenseless body into the meat grinder, or abort the migration and face starvation. In one migration of mule deer in Colorado in the 1980s, 3,000 deer died along one road segment. Whereas for humans, roads connect, for animals, roads dissect and destroy.
There are a few practical bits of information as it relates to minimizing roadkill in the text: roadkill rarely occurs with vehicles moving under twenty-five miles-per-hour, and most animal death occurs especially at dawn and dusk, but also at night. And, thoughtfully designed animal crossings can work!
Goldfarb doesn’t go quite as far as Charles Marohn in his book “Strong Towns,” or as far as McBay, Keith, and Jensen in “Deep Green Resistance.” He doesn’t outright advocate for the removal of existing paved roads. Maybe he should. That said, he does report on the malicious racialized history of road construction (the ways in which they've benefited white communities at the expense of block communities), and some of these roads are being removed (often inner-city freeways).
Goldfarb’s breadth is magnificent. The book covers a history of roads and roadkill, going back to the suburbs of Persia and the turtles, crushed under the chariot wheels of the Romans. It covers the US Forrest service, and their countless millions of miles of forest roads (still ravaging ecology, even when a vehicle hasn’t set wheel on them for fifty years). You’ll read about “design speed,” (the speed at which you naturally want to drive a road, as opposed to the posted speed limit). You’ll learn about the extirpation of the deer from a majority of the United States, and their recovery. You’ll hear about the Salmon Superhighway, a massive culvert upgrade project in the Pacific Northwest that went all the way to the Supreme Count. There’s a section on the Carers in Australia and Tazmania who donate $6 billion of time annually for the care of animals who have been impacted by cars. You’ll learn about the sheep herds of Denali and the ten-minute gap between buses to ensure their safe passage. Page after page, chapter after chapter, Goldfarb’s words will evoke tears. I treat tears as an indicator of truth, and this is one of the trust books I’ve read in quite some time.
Having completed the book, I’m left pondering both the phenomenology and the philosophy of roads. In our human minds, roads are an afterthought—a way to get from point A to B. But for animals, they’re very much in the world of things, and concrete things at that. In a car, we experience a road in a wafting quality, as though we’re floating on a gust of wind. For animals, they represent sensory overload (and death): blinding lights, impossibly fast and hard gleaming beasts, oblivious to your agency and semiotics. One reconciler here are pedestrians. Civil engineering has been forced in recent years to account for the pesky two-leggeds, doggedly insisting that they too deserve a place in our infrastructure. Is the rest of Animalia all that different? Don’t they too deserve a place? show less
Buffalo. Wolves. Cougars. And now beavers. Enter the world of re-wilding. To do this requires scientific and public support. The later is most important, politically, and that is where books come in for education and advocacy. Eager is a defense of the beaver and you will finish it convinced we need more beavers, lots more. It's not a threatened species, but the natural services it provides are immense and not widely known. Primarily because it is the dams and wetlands that restore rivers, show more fish, flood control and water aquifers. The beaver is a keystone species. They are so effective, people are selling fake beaver dams. Nevertheless, old biases still exist and many consider beavers a pest to be trapped and controlled. Thus there are beaver advocacy groups and beaver wars at county and state levels. One of the most backwards states is California because water is so limited they don't see a place for beavers at the table, even though beavers have a net positive effect. Other countries like Scotland are seeing beavers reintroduced for the first time in 400 years, while a German man has been replanting beavers in countries all over the world. None of this goes easily, and most places remain hostile to the beaver. One behind my house was trapped and disappeared not long ago. This book has made me into a beaver believer. show less
What an interesting & wide-ranging book on road ecology! While it may sound wonky, it's written for the general reader; he makes it very clear how "new" of a scientific field road ecology is. It's obvious some of the chapters were first written for magazine publications but this serves the book well; he's able to share his detailed visits to roadways throughout the U.S. and even other parts of the world. His "on the ground" interviews with Forest Service/Nat'l Park leaders, road ecologists, show more wildlife biologists,city planners, urban community leaders, and even animal rescue volunteers are woven into the analysis of each chapter's topic in an engaging and seamless way. His book examines everything from the enormous complexity & ongoing tragedy of "roadkill" (about one million killed by cars every day!?) and also the very specific biome of roads and roadsides for everything from frogs to cougars. He provides chapters on the history of the "rise of the automobile" in our country, the subsequent explosion of roadways and interstates, even the building of roads throughout our country's wilderness areas via the Forest Service. He traces how roads have both helped and hindered, even debilitated communities within urban areas, esp diverse communities of immigrants, or predominantly black/Latino/etc. I really appreciated that though he explained the truly staggering negative effects and outcomes of our country's, (& other countries') road systems, he recognized the positives such roadways have and continue to have for our human populations, and the efforts many stakeholders are making to either change or even reverse road policies and new approaches being tried to save animal species from further decline. I had several "aha" moments as I recognized interstate hwys he uses as part of his detailed focus -I've driven on them so many times in cross country trips, being a tourist, etc! And our family has used Forest Service roads through various states so many times as part of our camping/recreation/fishing-hunting activities. I learned so much while reading this; I must admit I have a new curiousity and appreciation for the weedy or windswept or forested sides of roadways where I zip along sometimes at 70 mph. show less
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