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Nature's ecosystem engineers are quietly managing waterways
The Country Smallholder
|Spring 2025
Michael Wale finds beavers in West London working for the Local Council!

When the lesser known football club Brentford were promoted to the cash rich Premiership their fans invented a new song to sing at matches : “ We’re only a bus stop in Hounslow”.
Now another lesser-known West London area Greenford, mainly known for its flyover carrying traffic to and from central London on the A40, could invent another anthem: “There are beavers in Greenford”.
And sure enough there are, which has put them on the on the nationwide environmental map.
Beavers were hunted to extinction across the UK 400 years ago for their pelts, much in demand by the fashion industry. But now they are looked upon as something much more practical. They are eco system engineers. Their reintroduction, and more importantly, permanent future as part of Britain's wildlife has the full backing of the Wildlife Trusts, a grassroots movement of 46 charities, 910,000 and 15.000 volunteers.
BRINGING BEAVERS BACK TO BRITAIN
It was Sean McCormack, a trained vet, who started and currently leads, the Ealing Wildlife Group in West London that began the campaign to bring beavers back to West London and eventually find a home in Greenford. He found allies from many sources as time passed, crucially Ealing Council.
Ironically, as far as McCormack is concerned, his love of beavers started back home in his native Ireland, a country where there is no evidence that there have ever been beavers there. He says: “I’ve been fascinated by beavers since an early age. I read about wildlife and when I came across beavers, I was just astounded by them”.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Spring 2025-Ausgabe von The Country Smallholder.
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