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Mountain Lion Slaughters Cats (CA)
Mountain News ^ | May 7, 2009 | Cat Robertson

Posted on 05/07/2009 2:43:47 PM PDT by jazusamo

 

 

When a local couple heard their cats outside crying at about 2 o'clock on Tuesday morning, they thought it was probably a dog bothering their cats, but it wasn't. They were completely shocked at what they found in their yard. A huge mountain lion had made its way into the enclosure in which their cats were kept. The three cats didn’t stand a chance.

The couple, who live near Crestline Video, asked not to be identified. They are heartbroken and in shock. “The mountain lion was probably 3-and-a-half to four feet long,” the woman said. “It looked like it weighed about 300 pounds. It was four feet tall.”

“I was at my computer and I heard this heinous scream,” the woman’s husband said. “I didn’t know if it was a raccoon or my cats. I went outside and saw a huge mountain lion trapped inside the pen. It bucked its head at me. I think it felt threatened. It didn’t seem to like me at all. At that point I ran into the house and called 9-1-1.”

The sheriff was there within minutes, and arrived in time to see the mountain lion while it was still in the pen.

“The sheriff's spotlight was trained on the pen, and it startled the cat,” the man said. “It bucked the pen. It used its head to move it, and it (the pen) flew in the air. I haven't seen a mountain lion this big since (I went to) the San Diego Zoo. It's as big as the ones at the Mirage (in Vegas). When the pen went flying I ran inside the house.”

“If we knew something like that could do this kind of damage,” the man’s wife said, “we'd have never left them outside, even in an enclosure.”

The man said there is a gully in his back yard, and he thought the mountain lion might have been stalking animals in the area.

“A couple of years ago a cat of ours vanished without a trace. This could explain it,” he said. “This is one mean cat. Anyone caught by this thing, if it was in the right frame of mind, would be killed.”

ALWAYS BE CAUTIOUS

Deputies conducted an area check, and the mountain lion was seen in front of a home on Bowl Road, heading toward Crest Forest Drive. They contacted the California Department of Fish and Game (DFG), and are reminding locals to keep an eye on their children and pets. Always supervise children when they are outdoors, and try to keep pets in at night.

“As a reminder,” a sheriffs' press release states, “if residents see a mountain lion they are not authorized to shoot the animal, but immediately notify the sheriff's department and the DFG.”

The DFG offers this information and these tips to stay safe: More than half of California is mountain lion habitat. Mountain lions generally exist wherever deer are found. They are solitary and elusive, and their nature is to avoid humans.

Mountain lions prefer deer but, if allowed, they also eat pets and livestock. In extremely rare cases, even people have fallen prey to mountain lions.

- Don't feed deer; it is illegal in California and it will attract mountain lions.

- Deer-proof your landscaping by avoiding plants that deer like to eat. For tips, request a Gardener's Guide to Preventing Deer Damage from DFG offices.

- Trim brush to reduce hiding places for mountain lions.

- Don't leave small children or pets outside unattended.

- Install motion-sensitive lighting around the house.

- Provide sturdy, covered shelters for sheep, goats, and other vulnerable animals.

- Don't allow pets outside when mountain lions are most active—dawn, dusk, and at night.

- Bring pet food inside to avoid attracting raccoons, opossums and other potential mountain lion prey.

Staying Safe in Mountain Lion Country

Mountain lions are quiet, solitary and elusive, and typically avoid people. Mountain lion attacks on humans are extremely rare. However, conflicts are increasing as California's human population expands into mountain lion habitat.

- Do not hike, bike, or jog alone.

- Avoid hiking or jogging when mountain lions are most active—dawn, dusk and at night.

- Keep a close watch on small children.

- Do not approach a mountain lion.

- If you encounter a mountain lion, do not run; instead, face the animal, make noise and try to look bigger by waving your arms; throw rocks or other objects. Pick up small children.

- If attacked, fight back.

- If a mountain lion attacks a person, immediately call 9-1-1.

Mountain lions that threaten people are immediately killed. Those that prey on pets or livestock can be killed by a property owner after the required depredation permit is secured. Moving problem mountain lions is not an option. It causes deadly conflicts with other mountain lions already there, or the relocated mountain lion returns to the area from which it was removed.



TOPICS: Outdoors; Pets/Animals
KEYWORDS: armedcitizen; banglist; california; ccw; cougar; mountainlion; rkba
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To: Inyo-Mono; CottonBall
In California it isn’t so much, as the article states, that people are encroaching on mountain lion territory, as the fact that there are too many mountain lions in California.

I couldn't agree more. In the last few years there have been problems in communities in the San Gabriel Valley that have been established for over 50 years. Lion numbers are increasing and those communities have not encroached any appreciable amount into the lions habitat.

81 posted on 05/08/2009 8:11:43 AM PDT by jazusamo (But there really is no free lunch, except in the world of political rhetoric,.: Thomas Sowell)
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To: djf

Correct...I doubt that cougar even came close to approaching 300 lbs.


82 posted on 05/08/2009 8:14:51 AM PDT by jazusamo (But there really is no free lunch, except in the world of political rhetoric,.: Thomas Sowell)
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To: Slings and Arrows; TheOldLady
LOL!

One cool summer morning I was sitting at the computer as usual. It finally dawned on me that I was hearing a repetitive thump from in front of the house, and maybe I should go have a look to see what it was.

Um, as it turned out, I had booby-trapped kitty by opening the lower part of a window while neglecting to block the opening with the screen. So there was kitteh trying to reverse her fall into the scary outdoors, only to thump this close from the sill and slide back down the siding. All that frightening grass and pine needles, oh my!

Poor thing was really freaked out, and I managed to stifle my giggles for long enough to cuddle her indoors and close the screen before settling her on a properly protected window sill.
83 posted on 05/08/2009 9:32:49 AM PDT by Titan Magroyne ("Drill now drill hard drill often and give old Gaia a cigarette afterwards she deserves it." HerrBlu)
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To: Titan Magroyne

Poor baby! LOL!


84 posted on 05/08/2009 10:08:15 AM PDT by Slings and Arrows (Israel is built on rock. Arabia is built on sand.)
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To: randomhero97; shibumi
These guys take down *African* lions.

A mountain lion wouldn't *even* be half a challenge.

A pack of bear-killing Plott Hounds would eat him for a snack.

Even Portuguese Podengos [fairly small dogs] give wild boars what for.

[The PPs average only about 24 inches tall]

I can think of lots of "primitive" pack hounds who thoroughly would enjoy the opportunity....:)

85 posted on 05/09/2009 2:56:04 AM PDT by Salamander (Cursed with Second Sight.)
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To: jazusamo
I like in a mountain area where they have a season on mountain lions. My yard is full of deer and I leave my cats out all night when they want to stay out.There is a deer repellent pantskyd that works great to protect my garden and flowers. I live on 5 acres in the country and they have killed a lion in town. They have seen and killed wolves close to my place ,but I haven't heard one howl yet.
To scare wildlife just put up a picture of the teleprompter in chief. It may attract rats but the cats can get them.
86 posted on 05/09/2009 9:52:41 AM PDT by Big Horn (Rebuild the GOP to a conservative party)
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To: Big Horn
To scare wildlife just put up a picture of the teleprompter in chief. It may attract rats but the cats can get them.

LOL! Well said and I wouldn't doubt it would work.

87 posted on 05/09/2009 11:31:05 AM PDT by jazusamo (But there really is no free lunch, except in the world of political rhetoric,.: Thomas Sowell)
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