"As busy as a beaver." |
The beaver is a small, furry animal, whose industry has passed into a proverb and has been the subject of many literary allusions. "As busy as a beaver" is a compliment to a man and a tribute to this little gnawing animal.
- The beaver was once common in all northern latitudes, but trappers preyed incessantly upon it for its valuable fur, and it is now necessary to protect it by law in many places.
- The beaver usually lives in North America, but it occurs solitary in central Europe and Asia.
- It has short ears, a blunt nose, small forefeet, large webbed hind feet and a flat tail covered with scales on its upper surface.
- The food of the beavers consists of the bark of trees, leaves, roots and berries.
- Their favorite haunts are rivers and lakes which are bordered by forests.
- In winter they live in houses, about three feet high and seven feet across, substantially built of branches of trees and of mud, on the water's edge so that the entrance can be under water.
- These dwellings are called beaver lodges, and each accommodates a single family.
- The teeth of beavers are very strong, and they cut down quite large trees by gnawing around them.
- Trees around them are felled for food, and also that their branches may be used in building their houses.
- Beavers are most peculiar, in that sometimes many families work together in communities practically as one. If the stream on which they have located is not deep enough, or if the water does not cover land enough for them, the colony will unite and build an ingenious dam of wood, stones and mud across the stream.
- In the pond thus created, each member has its own home.
- The beavers hold among animals somewhat the same position the bees have among insects, in this remarkable instinct of working in common.
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