![]()
|
|||||||||
|
The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Cougar
lingers at BBR The
cougar that was scared away from a Black Butte Ranch resident's yard by
a mini-doxie dog last week was not scared very far away.
It was spotted several times
in the upper portion of Black Butte Ranch as late as Saturday, November
22.
Several phone calls went out
from those who saw it to neighbors and friends warning that pets should
be kept close and not allowed to roam free, as the big cat was still on
the prowl.
One observer, Bob Reed, reported
that remnants of a goose dinner were found near his house on Candy Flower.
Jerry Kvanvig and his wife,
Jackie, were returning from breakfast about 9:30 a.m., Saturday, and decided
to follow the tracks clearly marked in the new snow at the bottom of their
driveway. They led to a heavy thicket directly behind the sixth tee at
the Glaze Meadow golf course.
"As I got within two or three
steps of the thicket, out blew this cougar, running full tilt. It ran
50-60 yards up towards our house, crossed Hawks Beard and headed for the
National Forest," he said."It was pretty good size."
A cougar in this region will
generally be about six feet long and weigh between 90 pounds (female)
to 150 pounds for the male.
After Kvanvig made sure all
was secure, he backtracked the cougar's trail to where he found the goose
kill seen by Reed.
"A year or so ago we had a
deer killed by a cougar not too far from here," he said.
He also thinks that this animal
may be the same one spotted recently in Camp Sherman.
"They cover a wide range of
territory," he said.
Another resident said she
saw the mountain lion (as a cougar is often called) "sauntering up her
street," Arvensis, not far from the Reed's house.
The cougar was originally
spotted a week ago when Judy Osborne let her mini-dachshund dog out at
6:30 a.m. and saw the cat about 20 feet away. Maxine, the mini-doxie,
went after the cougar which was scared away -- perhaps as much by Osborne's
scream as by the ferocious attack of her 11-pound, five-inch high dog.
The Osbornes live on Partridge
Foot, about in the middle of the ranch.
Cougars are usually a tawny
brown and go by the name of puma, panther or mountain lion in different
parts of the country. |
|
|||||||