I released twenty beavers into my dying Montana creek, and the whole town came-felicia

Howard Briggs laughed from his blue pickup truck, a cigar dangling from his mouth, and yelled loud enough for everyone by the fence to hear:

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“Sarah’s dead, Ethan… and now you’ve really lost it.”

I stood there, my throat thick with dust, my hand resting on the trailer door, while more than three hundred scrawny cattle wandered across the dry pasture behind me.

The creek beside us barely deserved the name anymore.

A thin ribbon of muddy water crawled through cracked earth.

Cottonwood trees leaned over the banks like exhausted old men.

The grass had turned yellow months ago.

Even the wind felt thirsty.

Nobody in Bitter Creek, Montana, believed my ranch would survive another summer.

Honestly, most days I didn’t believe it either.

Three years of drought had devastated the region.

Wells were drying up.

Pastures were failing.

Families that had ranched for generations were selling cattle at desperate prices.

Every conversation at the feed store sounded the same.

Nobody talked about growth anymore.

People talked about survival.

Or surrender.

My wife Sarah had spent the last year of her life searching for solutions.

She read environmental studies.

She contacted conservation groups.

She attended water management meetings.

She filled notebooks with ideas.

Most people dismissed them.

Including me.

Then cancer took her.

Six months later, I found those notebooks again.

And one idea refused to leave my mind.

Beavers.

Not dams.

Not irrigation systems.

Not expensive engineering projects.

Just beavers.

Sarah had highlighted article after article.

Research from universities.

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