I mean, I know there are Cougars living wild in Connecticut,
Are you saying there is a resident population or that the occasional wondering male has been sighted there?
I mean, I know there are Cougars living wild in Connecticut,
Are you saying there is a resident population or that the occasional wondering male has been sighted there?
Mobile phones with cameras generally killed stories about escaped big cats, bigfoot, flying saucers, ghosts or headless horsemen.
Wild cats are quite easily identified by their footprints left on dirt roads, pond edges, fresh snow etc. Another good way is to establish scratching posts baited with catnip. A good book about animal tracks and signs costs less than 20 pounds. I still get a thrill whenever I find footprints of a lynx, badger, wild boar or a red deer. More expensive - over 100 pounds - are camera traps.
Trying all these will not let you find a leopard in Britain, but is a good way to get interested in real local wildlife.
As Thylo has also remarked, this belief is due to having heard too many first-hand accounts from too many unconnected sources (and in various parts of England and Scotland) to readily dismiss, along with certain rumours about people "helping along" the prospect of a legal re-introduction programme for Eurasian Lynx by taking matters into their own hands..... as was done previously with European Beaver, and is currently being done in parts of the country with Pine Marten.
There is one single record of an escaped Lynx killed in Britain in recent times. However, nothing suggests this was anything more than an isolated, shortly escaped animal. It was well described by Darren Naish on his blog, who also covered the British belief in big cats quite intensively.
Penguins, zebras, antelope, ostriches, emus, condors, kiwis and polar bears were also seen in the wild in Britain, and they were all single, short time escaped animals.
Some of you may be interested in actual experiences of people trying to re-wild Lynx and other big cats in countries they actually live. Zoo-bred Lynx do easily catch wild animals. However, there are completely, naively unafraid of man. They often catch domestic animals without hiding themselves from farmers. They are also very vulnerable to being killed on roads. This makes it very unlikely that a released bigger cat can live stealthily for any longer time.
In the late 1960s I often used to see a man walking his Leopard around Clapham Junction in the Northcote Road area.
Clearly there were kept as pets in the UK at some point
The famously written-up Lion 'Christian' came from there. It's where I saw my first Margay.Many years ago, you could buy most wild cat species at Harrod's.
The famously written-up Lion 'Christian' came from there. It's where I saw my first Margay.
Ultimately, like religion, it's really a matter of faith (which I don't have).
If you read some German, you may find this website of interest:
Arbeitskreis Hessenluchs: Luchs und Wolf in Hessen
It deals with Eurasian Lynx in Hessen region of Germany, which are wandering animals, mostly from reintroductions in other German states.
the majority of the cases are probably mere black house cats whose size has been judged wrong.