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Parachuting beavers go global
October 28, 2015
It wasn't exactly an unreleased Beatles tune or a missing Monet, but the much-talked-about film featuring parachuting beavers was recently rediscovered in Fish and Game's archives.

The 1950s film "Fur for the Future" produced by the department highlighted Fish and Game's efforts to transplant muskrats, marten and beavers, which included parachuting beavers into the back-country.

Working with the Idaho Historical Society, Fish and Game staff were able to find the film which was found in a mislabeled box.

Last week, Idaho Fish and Game released the long-lost film. The film documented a project to repopulate backcountry wilderness areas of Idaho with beaver—pretty routine work in the late 1940s and early 1950s. However, add parachutes, specially designed boxes and aircraft into the mix, and the story becomes one of wildlife management’s most interesting tales. And it has not gone unnoticed.

Parachuting beavers have captured the attention of people all around the world. Since it was posted, 471,000 viewers have checked out the film on the Fish and Game YouTube Channel. Calls from radio stations and newspapers for interviews have come in from across the country including San Francisco, Orlando, Dallas, New York City and the heartland. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation ran a piece from Toronto.

But the interest does not end in North America. From Brazil to India to Australia to the United Kingdom and beyond, beavers are parachuting onto radio programs, newspapers and websites. There is just something about a 40-pound rodent safely floating to its new home tucked in a box at the end of a WWII-era parachute. Slightly unbelievable, somewhat strange, definitely true, and ultimately successful, it’s just the story for the lead-up to Halloween.

If you have not yet seen this fascinating look at wildlife management of yesteryear, check it out by clicking here.

 
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