Minnesota Mountain Lions!

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If its in your yard, its fair game. Think 444Marlin

Yup. Exactly. Just remember, "he was stalking me, he was watching me and creeping toward me" as explained by the youngsters in California (California?) who recently killed a cougar while turkey hunting and got a clearance from the local DNR. If it will fly in California it will fly in Minnesota.
 
I am from northern Illinois originally, and every time I go home to visit the folks I hear stories like this from my neighbors, big cats, bears, whatever wandering the little patches of woods. Makes me wonder. Of course, no open carry or concealed carry in Illinois! Maybe I should carry a spear when I go fishing in my dad's back woodlot?

Hey, Lee N. Field, and recent sightings?
 
i tell you what, i've been within 1 foot of a live mountain lion, with nothing between us. he was on a chain at the MN deer hunters show. the DNR had a Timber Wolf and a Mountain lion in the hallway, where you could walk up and look at them. i even touched the wolf as it walked by. he was starting to get antsy so they switched him for another wolf. they are both BIG MO-FOs! i sure as hell wouldn't use a .22 on either.

i don't think i was able to pet the lion, he was always looking at me. the look gave me the whillies. i damn near stepped on his tail. to this day, i think "a couple more inches" and my ass would have been beat to hell by that cat. that tail was looooong! beautiful animal though.
 
I live about 60 miles west of Minneapolis the story was just a big lie about a large bobcat. Regards-rangemasta
 
15 foot from tip of nose to tip of tail is like a date with a playboy playmate, something that only happens in your dreams. That would be about 8 feet longer than some heathly B&C Puddies.
 
the story was just a big lie about a large bobcat

Still a good idea to go shopping for a .357 or .44 lever and be prepared. Might even want to get a good sidearm to match just in case. And one of them good Tarzan type knives if ya have to rassle with the critter.

Vick
 
Cougar? Eh that's not so bad. A few years ago my town sent out a warning that a pet tiger was on the loose :eek: . I hear there are more wolves moving into southern minnesota.

Right now there should be plenty prey for a few cougars. Heck, shorewood isn't far from where I live. What is the normal size for cougar territory?
 
Huge. They are normally solitary unless breeding or with young.

Several years back Lava Hot Spring, Idaho had a bunch of lions, tigers and Ligers get loose. Most were captured, some were killed.
 
like a date with a playboy playmate, something that only happens in your dreams.

Good Night All ! ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ

Cougar visited our grove in south central MN when I was a young lad. (long time ago) Once in awhile a stray something or other finds its way where it normaly isn't seen. A few years back I glanced into the field to see a large bull moose grazing - this is southern MN about 100 miles north of the Iowa border - not moose country. Cougar's show up very seldom in central to southern MN, but they do.
 
This is one seriously confused and wayward mountain lion. Doesn't it know there are no mountains in Minnesota?


DL
 
We used to have mountains in Minnesota. But they were made out of iron ore, so we knocked them down and shipped them to Detroit.

Now all we have are huge holes in the ground and monstrous piles of rusting cars.
 
It is probably a adolescent male. Momma chases them off before they reach breeding age as a means of not interbreeding. He has to find his own territory where the big male kitties won't kick his trash.
 
http://www.bear-tracker.com/cougar.html
mountainlionbykc.gif
Mountain lions are also called cougars, panthers, catamounts, or pumas. These big cats have many common names. They are the largest wild cats in North America.

These solitary animals avoid people if they can. Their primary prey is deer, but they do eat porcupines, raccoons, birds, small mammals, foxes, mice, and grass.
The lion is a magnificent animal which was hunted to near extinction and is now making a comeback. There have even been reported mountain lion sightings in the eastern U.S., where they were once thought extinct.

A single male lion may require up to 175 square miles of territory for its home range. They prefer wild areas frequented by deer. One lion will consume about one deer per week. A lion will cover the remains of its prey and return to the kill to feed until the meat begins to turn. If you find a lion kill, don't hang around the area. The animal may still be nearby. An adult can weigh up to 200 pounds.

Young mountain lions have spots and a ringed tail, and thus are sometimes mistaken for bobcats. (The bobcat has a short tail, while the lion has a long tail.) A litter of one to six young are born between late winter and mid-summer. The cubs stay with their mother for one or two years.
Lion tracks show four toes on the front foot and four toes on the hind foot. The retractable claws do not show in the prints. Lion tracks can be over four inches long.

They are good climbers and can leap more than 20 feet up into a tree from a standstill. They can jump to the ground from as high as 60 feet up a tree. A single male lion may travel 25 miles a night when hunting. Lions may be active by day in areas far from humans. They are most active at dawn and dusk, the times when deer are out feeding.
 
I live about 60 miles west of Minneapolis the story was just a big lie about a large bobcat. Regards-rangemasta
I got this "exclusive information" on KSTP news Chaneel 5

So who was lying? Who determined that it was a large bobcat? Did they find some tracks? Did someone photograph or shoot it?

Your one-line posts are maddeningly uninformative. Please tell us what you know, or don't bother with your enigmatic quips.
 
Some toddler told his mother he saw a really big puddy tat and she got all freaked out, told minnetonka police it was a mountain lion and thus the search. The DNR determined after some time there was no mountain lion and just a large bobcat they captured in Eagan days ago.
 
I'm not familiar with the Minnesota cougar report, but they are in Iowa, confirmed by the DNR and law enforcement; and if I recall the news accounts correctly, are believed to be coming in in response to increased deer population and the need for large territories. The first of the more recent accounts was a dead animal alongside a road in western Iowa, a young male I think, probably hit by a vehicle (but I don't recall ever hearing that someone came forward stating it was their car that hit it).

More recently, a remote DNR camera recorded a cougar in a park area in east-central Iowa, following a report by a couple on a hiking trail. There have been other reports, some confirmed, some not. But two confirmed across most of the width of Iowa means they are probably others here; and likely in Minnesota as well. Bobcat sightings seems to be increasing in the state also. Because of increased population of the predators nation-wide, more food sources, and more conservation areas, one state official stated that it was never a matter of if the large predators would come back to Iowa, but when.
 
I love how some of us big, bad, gun-owners freak out at the mere mention of a "mountain lion".

And some folks first instinct is to go out there and kill it? On the justification that it's dangerous to people?

From 1986 through 1995, nine verified attacks occurred, an average rate of almost one per year.

OH NO! IT'S THE INVASION OF THE MOUNTAIN LIONS! CIRCLE THE WAGONS, PROTECT THE WOMEN AND CHILDREN!

You people are a joke! :uhoh: And you wonder why people are so quick to legislate away our RKBA. :banghead:

I've done a lot of hiking, backpacking, mountain biking in California, and have had over half-a-dozen mountain lion sightings over the years and not once have I ever felt fear from an encounter (including one where a lion was no more than 50 yards away).
 
ScorpioVI,

I never go into the woods without a firearm of some type, not because of mountains lions, but because of fear of rabid animals, be it 2 or 4 legged.

Who said we were freaking out and had to kill the lion, I missed that. A mountain lion has been confirmed to be within 8 miles of where I live. There have been unconfirmed sightings basically in my back yard and tracks that appear to have come from a large cat. I'm not freaking out, I would love to see it though.

I read about tree huggers like you all the time in the obituaries, no respect for a dangerous animals, be it a buffalo, a moose, or a mountain lion.
 
Who said we were freaking out and had to kill the lion, I missed that.


When was the last time you got your eyes checked there, Eagle-Eye? Might wanna do that sharpish, don't want you taking a shot at something you didn't see all that well.

Here, let me help you out.


Can'thavenuthingood: I think it's a very good time for you Minnesota types to get out of the house and shop for a nicely wooded Marlin or Winchester in a .357 or .44, okay get a 30-30 too just in case.
PATH: Someone break out the 1001 Cat Recipes Cook Book!
Gordy Wesen: Shoot first and take the hindquarters home.
mete: "should not be dangerous" ???? I guess they've never heard of the cases of the cats attacking people !
burrhead: Shoot, shovel and shut up.
ReadyOnTheRight: One of these cats is going to kill a kid and we'll spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to do the job a penny's-worth of .22 bullet used to do.
BJPARKER: If its in your yard, its fair game. Think 444Marlin.
Stand Waite: Yup. Exactly. Just remember, "he was stalking me, he was watching me and creeping toward me" as explained by the youngsters in California (California?) who recently killed a cougar while turkey hunting and got a clearance from the local DNR.




I read about tree huggers like you all the time in the obituaries, no respect for a dangerous animals, be it a buffalo, a moose, or a mountain lion.

This being the "High Road" and all, I won't call you a retard for that really stupid comment. I've got plenty of respect for dangerous animals, which is why I don't advocate shooting them on sight. I think you're confused about what "respect" means. Here, let me help you out on that department.

http://www.webster.com

Main Entry: 1re·spect
Pronunciation: ri-'spekt
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Latin respectus, literally, act of looking back, from respicere to look back, regard, from re- + specere to look -- more at SPY

3 a : high or special regard : ESTEEM b : the quality or state of being esteemed c plural : expressions of respect or deference



Notice the lack of reference to "shooting without regard" as an acceptable form of paying respects.
 
I'll keep checking the obit's



Yea you do that. :neener:


I'll keep my eye out for yours too. With people like Jeff Weise and Chai Vang floating around in your neck of the woods (who between them has killed 15 folks in the last 4 months), I think you have a lot more to fear from the two-legged kind of animal than I do from my encounters with the four-legged kind.
 
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