"Very bizarre" —

Cable-chewing beavers take out town’s Internet in “uniquely Canadian” outage

Beavers dug 3-foot hole, chewed through fiber conduit and the cable itself.

A beaver in shallow water, chewing on a branch.
Enlarge / A wild beaver works furiously in Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming.
Getty Images | Jeff R Clow

About 900 Internet users in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, lost service for 36 hours when beavers chewed through an underground fiber cable in what network operator Telus called a "very bizarre and uniquely Canadian turn of events."

"Our team located a nearby dam, and it appears the beavers dug underground alongside the creek to reach our cable, which is buried about three feet underground and protected by a 4.5-inch thick conduit. The beavers first chewed through the conduit before chewing through the cable in multiple locations," the statement from Telus said, according to a CBC article posted Sunday.

The beavers apparently used some of the Telus materials to build their dam. Telus provided Ars with these photos of the damaged cable and the beaver dam:

Internet service went down at about 4 am Saturday and was restored by Telus at around 3:30 pm on Sunday. Telus also said there were disruptions to cell phone service in the area and to TV service for about 60 customers. Tumbler Ridge has about 2,000 residents.

Telus told Ars that the cause of the fiber cut was "fairly unique" because the beavers "chewed through our fiber cable at multiple points, causing extensive damage."

"Our crews brought in additional equipment and technicians to help expose the cable and determine how far the damage continued up the line, and have worked around the clock under challenging conditions as the ground above our cable is partially frozen," Telus said.

As the BBC noted in its coverage of the incident, beavers are "Canada's national animal," but they "have a mixed reputation. The rodents are loved by some as the ultimate environmental engineers whose dam-building skills bring an array of ecological benefits. But their incredibly strong teeth can cause extensive damage, and farmers in particular worry at the havoc they could cause to crops and trees."

Lack of redundancy in fiber lines

Tumbler Creek's beaver problem was yet another example of how Internet service can be disrupted in a variety of ways. In western Massachusetts last month, about 2,000 customers in six towns lost service when "a burning tree severed a fiber-optic line on the state's middle-mile network," The Berkshire Eagle reported at the time.

"It's not hard to understand why this happens in rural America. In much of the country, the fiber backbone lines that support Internet access to rural towns use the same routes that were built years ago to support telephone service," telecommunications consultant Doug Dawson wrote in his blog yesterday.

"The bad news is that nobody is trying to fix the problem," Dawson also wrote. "The existing rural fiber routes are likely owned by the incumbent telephone companies, and they are not interested in spending money to create redundancy. Redundancy in the fiber world means having a second fiber route into an area so that the Internet doesn't go dead if the primary fiber is cut."

Channel Ars Technica