News

Luckily, a local fish-and-game warden named Elmo Heter was unusually imaginative and practical. In “When Beavers Flew,” Kristen Tracy describes Heter’s solution: ...
Circa 1950, Idaho Fish and Game tried a new way to handle beaver overpopulation: Relocate some by dropping them from planes. A film was made to document the practice, but it was lost — until now.
In 1948, Idaho decided the best way to move beavers was to airdrop them. Skip to main content. ... the article by Elmo W. Heter from the Idaho Fish and Game Department answered all our questions.
"Elmo is just checking in! How is everybody doing?" the X page for the Sesame Street character posted. Many answers were brutally honest and downright cynical about the dread people are feeling.
Lake Elmo is a community that's been dealing with PFAS for years. They are dangerous and potentially cancer-causing chemicals once created by 3M, that have found their way into drinking water.
The endeavor was directed by an Idaho Fish and Game employee named Elmo Heter who needed to move some beavers away from an area where homes were being built.
Back then, Idaho Fish and Game employee Elmo Heter decided that the best place for these beavers would be a remote area called Chamberlain Basin (now part of the Frank Church River of No Return ...
Elmo Heter, an employee of the Fish and Game Department in McCall, Idaho, came up with a plan so crazy it could work. He proposed using surplus parachutes from WWII to drop the beavers into the ...
“Beavers cannot stand the direct heat of the sun unless they are in water,” department employee Elmo W. Heter explained in a 1950 report . “Sometimes they refuse to eat. Older individuals ...
Back in the 1980s, an unsuspecting Cal frat house was victimized by a bunch of Chi Phi's, who stole the house's cannon and brought it back to Corvallis. ... Cal retaliated by stealing the cannon ...
Luckily, a local fish-and-game warden named Elmo Heter was unusually imaginative and practical. In “When Beavers Flew,” ...