In the 1940s the department was trying to deal with an overpopulation of beavers in some regions when wildlife managers settled on a novel idea.
They captured beavers and other fur-bearing rodents, packed them into boxes, attached parachutes and dropped them from a plane into the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness. A film made around 1950 showed the infamous beaver drops, but it had long been lost.
Recently, fish and game historian Sharon Clark found the fragile film, which had been mislabeled and stored in the wrong file.
Now it has been digitized and released by the Idaho Historical Society and the department of fish and game on YouTube.
It appears all beavers survived their flying adventures unharmed.
They captured beavers and other fur-bearing rodents, packed them into boxes, attached parachutes and dropped them from a plane into the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness. A film made around 1950 showed the infamous beaver drops, but it had long been lost.
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