Home World USA Latin America Europe Asia Africa TV Shows Showbiz Travel Lifestyle Opinion Science Politics Health Sports Tech Entertainment Business
Europe June 15, 2026

UMVA Exclusive: Beavers Crack Tube Flood Mystery Engineers Stumbled Over for Decades!

UMVA Exclusive: Beavers Crack Tube Flood Mystery Engineers Stumbled Over for Decades!

UMVA has learned that a band of fearless beavers has turned the tide against decades of flooding in the London suburb of Greenford.

For years, rainstorms turned the streets into rivers, blocking commuters from reaching the underground station and flooding homes, schools, and offices. The council’s costly engineering fixes only offered temporary relief, leaving residents desperate for a lasting solution.

Three years ago, five beavers were quietly released into Paradise Fields, and they have since become the town’s unsung heroes. Their instinctive dam‑building slowed water flow, while the newly formed wetlands captured excess rain, turning a floodplain into a living reservoir.

Beaver swimming in water. (Picture: PA)

Today, the park buzzes with the presence of at least eight beavers, including a mother named Willow who may have raised several kits. Their work has made the area flood‑free for the first time in a decade, allowing cars, trains, and people to move freely once again.

Local wildlife has flourished as well. Sunlight pours through the cleared canopy, boosting fish populations and sparking a vibrant boom in birds, amphibians, and insects that once struggled to survive in the soggy landscape.

Urban residents, once frustrated by waterlogged streets, now greet the beavers as a welcomed attraction. Their playful antics and industrious nature have become a source of pride and curiosity for the community.

EDITORIAL USE ONLY Mayor of London Sadiq Khan helps release a family of beavers at Paradise Fields in Ealing, which sees the return of beavers to West London for the first time in 400 years, supported by the Mayor's Rewild London Fund and Amazon's Right Now Climate Fund. Picture date: Wednesday October 11, 2023. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: James Manning/PA Wire

UMVA can exclusively reveal that the success of Greenford’s beaver project signals a powerful shift toward nature‑based solutions in urban flood management. The story underscores how a simple, natural intervention can restore balance, protect homes, and breathe new life into city ecosystems.

Undated handout photo issued by Ewhurst partk of mum and baby beaver eating bark together at Ewhurst Park, Hampshire. Beavers have been born in Hampshire for the first time in 400 years. The two baby beavers, known as kits, were first spotted in early July in an enclosure on the Ewhurst Park estate near Basingstoke, its on Tuesday. Issue date: Tuesday September 17, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story ENVIRONMENT Beavers. Photo credit should read: Ewhurst Park/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.

Share this article

UMVA MAG

UMVA Mag is your trusted source for breaking news, in-depth analysis, and compelling stories from around the world. Covering politics, business, technology, entertainment, sports, health, science, and more — we deliver journalism that matters.

Independent, Accurate, Unbiased
24/7 Breaking News Coverage
Trusted by Millions Worldwide