Beavers Save Millions, Finish Delayed Government Dam Project Themselves
A hardworking beaver colony in the Brdy protected landscape area has done what bureaucratic red tape could not—completed a vital dam project in record time, free of charge.
Saving money with beavers in the Czech Republic.
NOTE: this article was originally published to sunnyskyz.com on February 5 3, 2025.
Today's good news story comes from Brdy, Czech Republic.
A hardworking beaver colony in the Brdy protected landscape area has done what bureaucratic red tape could not—completed a vital dam project in record time, free of charge.
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The industrious rodents built several dams overnight, creating a much-needed wetland in the exact location where local authorities had planned a costly revitalization project.
The original project, which had secured approval and was set to cost 30 million crowns ($1.2 million), was stalled due to administrative delays, including negotiations over land ownership and securing necessary building permits. While officials waded through paperwork, the beavers simply got to work, completing the project without blueprints, permits, or taxpayer funding.
“They beat us to it,” admitted Bohumil Fišer, head of the Brdy Protected Landscape Area Administration. “They built the dams without any project documentation and for free.”
The beavers strategically placed their dams on a bypass gully, originally built by soldiers in the former military base to drain the area. Their work reversed the damage and successfully restored the landscape, benefiting local wildlife. Environmentalists inspecting the site praised the colony’s natural engineering skills, noting that the newly formed wetlands would provide ideal conditions for the rare stone crayfish, frogs, and other wetland species.
Zoologist Jiri Vlček acknowledged the beavers’ impressive speed.
“Beavers can build a dam in one or two nights. Meanwhile, people have to go through permits, approvals, and funding issues,” he said. “A single digger might have managed it in a week, but even then, we’d still need paperwork.”
Jaroslav Obermajer, head of the Central Bohemian office of the Czech Nature and Landscape Protection Agency, added, “Beavers always know best. The places where they build dams are always chosen just right—better than when we design it on paper.”
The public has embraced the story, cracking jokes about bureaucratic inefficiency and the beavers’ ability to outpace human planning.