Free: Contests & Raffles.
#TimeWastedFrom the title I thought this would be an X-Rated post.
Quote from: Cylvertip on March 15, 2019, 04:04:19 PMI have heard them called "boomers." Anyone know why? I have asked before and never gotten an answer.In the early 20th century there were quite a few people that moved from Appalachia to Oregon. In certain parts of Appalachia there is a type of squirrel that apparently makes a booming sound at times and so is called a boomer. When these people settled in Oregon, Mountain Beavers reminded them of these squirrels. Apparently just in their looks as the Oregon boomer doesn't make the booming sound. Anyway the name stuck. North of The Columbia never saw immigration from those areas to any extent so we went with Mountain Beaver.
I have heard them called "boomers." Anyone know why? I have asked before and never gotten an answer.
Bruce,Back in the 70's I was trapping beaver on a friends place in Lewis County out near lake creek.Above the beaver pond was a hillside covered with alders and sword ferns. I would hear a very low "booming" sound coming off that hillside on occasion; sort of like a combination of a grouse drumming and a chuckling sound. I started looking around for the source of the sound and found the entire hillside was a mass of mountain beaver tunnels. I'm sure the booming sound was being made by mountain beavers.