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RE: mountain lions in the midwest
> Mountain lion is real, but dead [/align] > [/align] > BY MARION RHODES [/align] > WORLD-HERALD STAFF WRITER [/align] > [/align] > [/align] > The call came in at the Sarpy County Sheriff's Office at 7:15 a.m. Sunday. [/align] > [/align] > A woman claimed she had seen a mountain lion lying on Interstate 80, near [/align] > the Gretna-Louisville interchange. [/align] > [/align] > Deputy Brian Fjelstad didn't get excited. The Sheriff's Office has [/align] > received at least a half dozen such reports over the past two or three [/align] > months. [/align] > [/align] > The latest had come earlier Sunday, about 1 a.m. A caller reported seeing [/align] > a live, large cat near Highway 370 and 192nd Street, just east of Gretna. [/align] > No one went out looking for it, because nighttime sightings are nearly [/align] > impossible to confirm. [/align] > [/align] > "You're not going to find a mountain lion at night," Lt. Steve Grabowski [/align] > of the Sarpy County Sheriff's Office said late Sunday morning. [/align] > [/align] > As Fjelstad was driving along the Interstate to check out the day's second [/align] > sighting, he thought he'd probably find a deer that was hit by a car. [/align] > That's what these type of calls usually turn out to be. [/align] > [/align] > He arrived at 8:07 a.m. [/align] > [/align] > A bundle of light brown fur was lying in the eastbound lane of I-80. "Like [/align] > a deer," Fjelstad thought. [/align] > [/align] > Then he noticed the long tail. The feet, the size of a grown man's [/align] > spread-out hand. The large cat head, lying in a small pool of blood. [/align] > [/align] > That's when he realized this wasn't another unconfirmed mountain lion [/align] > sighting. This one was for real. [/align] > [/align] > His anxiety level rose slightly as he came closer, close enough to touch [/align] > the more than 6-foot-long animal with the shiny black boot on his right [/align] > foot. The body was stiff. [/align] > [/align] > The mountain lion was dead. [/align] > [/align] > Droplets of red blood still stained Fjelstad's boot as he recounted the [/align] > episode outside the Sheriff's Office. [/align] > [/align] > Together with a fellow deputy, Fjelstad had wrapped the cat in a blanket [/align] > and put it in the trunk of his sheriff's cruiser. It was heavy, at least [/align] > 100 pounds, he said. With a hand gesture, he showed the cat's size on all [/align] > fours - just below his waist. [/align] > [/align] > Grabowski, who was standing nearby, said it was a lot bigger than the [/align] > mountain lion caught near 114th and Davenport Streets in October 2003, [/align] > which is now being kept at Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo. [/align] > [/align] > Fjelstad was astonished by the find. [/align] > [/align] > "I never expected it would turn out to be a mountain lion," he said. [/align] > [/align] > But not Sarpy County Sheriff Jeff Davis. A couple of years ago, he saw one [/align] > of the majestic cats himself. [/align] > [/align] > "I know they're out there," Davis said. "They're on the move." [/align] > [/align] > Although this mountain lion was found in a rural area, there are [/align] > subdivisions and hundreds of acreages nearby. Davis said he hadn't heard [/align] > any reports of attacks on livestock or pets, but he warned people to be [/align] > cautious. [/align] > [/align] > "We get enough sightings that I have enough reason to believe that there's [/align] > more out there," he said. "Maybe not in my lifetime, but down the road, [/align] > there could be a problem." [/align] > [/align] > Sheriff's officials said they assumed the earlier sighting was the same [/align] > animal, if that report was a mountain lion at all. That sighting was about [/align] > four miles northeast of where the dead mountain lion was found. [/align] > [/align] > The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission will do a necropsy on the cat to [/align] > determine its age and cause of death, and examine its stomach contents. [/align] > [/align] > Game and Parks policies will determine what happens with the animal's [/align] > body, but Davis said he hopes the animal will come back to Sarpy County, [/align] > possibly for a display in the Cabela's store to be built at the Interstate [/align] > 80 and 126th Street interchange. [/align] > [/align] > Either way, though, he was sure this wouldn't be the last time Sarpy [/align] > County would see a mountain lion. [/align] > [/align] > "I've always believed that they're out there," he said. "Obviously, this [/align] > shows that at least one was." [/align] > Contact the Omaha World-Herald newsroomCopyright ©2005 Omaha [/align] > World-Herald®. All rights reserved. This material may not be [/align] > published, broadcast, rewritten, displayed or distributed for any purpose [/align] > without permission from the Omaha World-Herald. [/align] > [/align] |
RE: mountain lions in the midwest
theve been seen in wisconsin here where i hunt near waushara county
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RE: mountain lions in the midwest
I am sure they are around. I think I saw one one day while I was driving but it went by so fast I can't say for sure. I am not worried about walkikng around the woods, the fields or creeks and rivers. I ussually have a gun and I am sure that they will be gone long before you get near them. I don't know about you but if I see one and have a shot. I am taking it. if I miss well fine then if I don't....well I cross that one when I get to it.
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RE: mountain lions in the midwest
I saw one next to my house last year walking on a hill about 100 yards away.Went outside to look and it was gone. I didn't call anybody cause I didn't want them to think I was nuts.But earlier this year the had a sighting in lynnwood il which is near me. And yes we are only 30-40 south of chicago. They also found one up by the wisconsin border last year dead. I think they are here there is alot of food for them and they have huge ranges.
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RE: mountain lions in the midwest
i live in lena il and about 8 years ago i am alomst certain i seen a cougar twice in about a months time in jo daviess county where i grew up .and for the last few years when checking deer in they do sometimes ask if you have seen any cats or cougars .
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RE: mountain lions in the midwest
ORIGINAL: palmergt3 [/align] > Contact the Omaha World-Herald newsroomCopyright ©2005 Omaha [/align] > World-Herald®. All rights reserved. This material may not be [/align] > published, broadcast, rewritten, displayed or distributed for any purpose [/align] > without permission from the Omaha World-Herald. [/align] > [/align] |
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