Showing posts with label black cat sighting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black cat sighting. Show all posts

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Big Cat seen again ,this time by non believer (via Lindsay Selby)

Change of heart by big cat sceptic
by Hector Mackenzie
Sheena MacBain - certain she saw a big cat.A ROSS-SHIRE woman who had dismissed big cat sightings as "totally fantastical" had a dramatic change of heart after seeing a mysterious black creature cross the road in front of her.Sheena MacBain, who grew up hearing about sightings of big cats, says she was always supremely sceptical about such stories until her own close encounter of an unexplained kind.Ms MacBain (46), who has a BSc in Environmental Science and is the daughter of a retired gamekeeper, was sufficiently impressed by her recent encounter to put the matter on record with local police in Dornoch, and now says, "I now know that this cat story is no longer just a story.
 
"Based in Fearn, she had been making her way along the low road to Dornoch at 7.30am to view a potential gardening job when the incident occurred.She said, "I was heading along the road at Cuthill when I saw what I first thought was a black labrador dog go in under the fence at the side of the road. It took me a second to register that this 'dog' actually had a long, lush cat's tail. The fact that I own a black lab, who was with me at the time, meant I knew it wasn't a labrador I saw cross that road!"
 
I stopped the car and could see there was a clear path down through the whin bushes and on further investigation although I didn't venture too far I could see there was actually a network of paths being used by this creature."Unsure of what to do, or whether there was someone in particular I should tell, I called into the police station at Dornoch to ask advice. The woman behind the reception desk quite literally rolled her eyes when I mentioned the words 'big cat'! She took my details and said she'd pass the information on to the wildlife liaison officer, but I have the feeling that I've been filed under 'crazy person'."
 
A police spokesman confirmed Northern Constabulary had dealt with a "spate" of reported big cat sightings earlier this year. Northern Constabulary itself issued a statement following two reported incidents of unexplained livestock deaths near Edderton in which they said police were "looking into the possibility that... sheep may have been attacked by a large cat, due to the nature of the injuries".
 

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Black puzzler: Tennesseeans continue to see a big cat (via Chad Arment)

Black puzzler: Tennesseeans continue to see a big cat that science says doesn't exist; but why?

Bryan Brasher
Memphis Commercial Appeal

For the past 13 years, Hardeman County hunter Earl Hanners has been telling a story that begins almost like a bachelor-party tale from the shimmering city of Las Vegas.

He starts by insisting, "I wasn't drunk. I wasn't on drugs. I wasn't hung over."

Then he recounts the moment he saw the strangest critter he's ever seen in the wild.

"I was deer hunting on the back side of a huge green field during the Tennessee bow season," Hanners said. "And at the far edge of the field, I saw a jet-black animal that was bigger than a bobcat and bigger than a coyote with a tail that looked like it was 3 feet long.

"I've thought about it and thought about it through the years, and there's just no doubt in my mind it was a black panther."


It's a great story, but with one obvious glaring flaw.

Science says there's no such thing as a black panther.

So-called "panther" sightings have become so common across the Mid-South that conservation officials barely raise an eyebrow over them anymore unless the caller has some type of photographic evidence -- and even when they do, the evidence is rarely compelling enough to warrant an actual investigation.

The sightings can usually be explained away very easily.

The usual stuff

People who don't spend a lot of time in the woods often mistake common, harmless bobcats for a larger, more menacing creature.

Experienced woodsmen know bobcats are grayish brown with random black spots. But in low-light conditions, it's easy for someone with limited outdoors experience to mistake them as solid black.

Coyotes -- another relatively harmless creature that is common across the Mid-South -- are also sometimes mistaken for large predators.

So are simple everyday black house cats.

"At one point, we were actually asking people to shoot these 'panthers' if they saw one so we could actually examine a carcass," said Alan Peterson of the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency. "But we stopped that because a couple of big house cats get shot. Now we just ask for a good picture."

Peterson used to keep a map in his office filled with color-coded push pens. Each pen represented a different type of reported unusual sighting across West Tennessee.

At one point, the pens representing black panthers outnumbered all of the other pens combined.

That's strange for an animal that supposedly doesn't exist -- and makes one wonder what strange black felines might be wandering the Mid-South landscape.

What could it be?
Though there's no documented critter known officially as a "black panther," several other large species of cats sometimes appear dark black due to a condition known as melanism.

In Latin America, melanistic jaguars are sometimes referred to incorrectly as black panthers, and melanistic leopards sometimes wear the misplaced title in Africa and Asia. There have been scattered reports of melanistic mountain lions for years in North America, but the reports have never been verified.

Some believe those cats in their melanistic state could be responsible for the sightings across the Mid-South. But conservation officials say it's hard to imagine that such animals could thrive in our region without lots of people gathering rock-solid proof.

"An animal like that has to eat to survive," said Ty Inmon, a West Tennessee conservation officer who has traveled the country hunting a variety of big-game species. "If we had a big population of large cats, you'd have livestock disappearing all over the place, and they'd do some serious damage to the deer herd. You'd have pets disappearing out of people's yards, and somebody would hit one with a car or snap a good picture.

"It would be hard for them to stay hidden for very long."

Mid-South's Bigfoot?
Beyond mistaken identity and the unexpected appearance of animals common to another part of the globe, some believe there is a third possible explanation for all of the black panther sightings.

Several web sites, including cryptomundo.com and weirld.com, think the black panther could be a cryptid -- a species of animal that has yet to be documented by science.

But as much as biologists would like to believe there's an unknown critter roaming local woods, they're tempering their excitement until they have tangible proof.

"It would be one of the greater stories of my lifetime," Peterson said. "And we certainly don't want to discourage people from reporting strange sightings.

"But at this point, we've had so many false sightings reported that we'll need to see some solid evidence before we get too terribly excited about one."

http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2010/dec/19/black-puzzler/

Black puzzler: Tennesseeans continue to see a big cat (via Chad Arment)

Black puzzler: Tennesseeans continue to see a big cat that science says doesn't exist; but why?

Bryan Brasher
Memphis Commercial Appeal

For the past 13 years, Hardeman County hunter Earl Hanners has been telling a story that begins almost like a bachelor-party tale from the shimmering city of Las Vegas.

He starts by insisting, "I wasn't drunk. I wasn't on drugs. I wasn't hung over."

Then he recounts the moment he saw the strangest critter he's ever seen in the wild.

"I was deer hunting on the back side of a huge green field during the Tennessee bow season," Hanners said. "And at the far edge of the field, I saw a jet-black animal that was bigger than a bobcat and bigger than a coyote with a tail that looked like it was 3 feet long.

"I've thought about it and thought about it through the years, and there's just no doubt in my mind it was a black panther."


It's a great story, but with one obvious glaring flaw.

Science says there's no such thing as a black panther.

So-called "panther" sightings have become so common across the Mid-South that conservation officials barely raise an eyebrow over them anymore unless the caller has some type of photographic evidence -- and even when they do, the evidence is rarely compelling enough to warrant an actual investigation.

The sightings can usually be explained away very easily.

The usual stuff

People who don't spend a lot of time in the woods often mistake common, harmless bobcats for a larger, more menacing creature.

Experienced woodsmen know bobcats are grayish brown with random black spots. But in low-light conditions, it's easy for someone with limited outdoors experience to mistake them as solid black.

Coyotes -- another relatively harmless creature that is common across the Mid-South -- are also sometimes mistaken for large predators.

So are simple everyday black house cats.

"At one point, we were actually asking people to shoot these 'panthers' if they saw one so we could actually examine a carcass," said Alan Peterson of the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency. "But we stopped that because a couple of big house cats get shot. Now we just ask for a good picture."

Peterson used to keep a map in his office filled with color-coded push pens. Each pen represented a different type of reported unusual sighting across West Tennessee.

At one point, the pens representing black panthers outnumbered all of the other pens combined.

That's strange for an animal that supposedly doesn't exist -- and makes one wonder what strange black felines might be wandering the Mid-South landscape.

What could it be?
Though there's no documented critter known officially as a "black panther," several other large species of cats sometimes appear dark black due to a condition known as melanism.

In Latin America, melanistic jaguars are sometimes referred to incorrectly as black panthers, and melanistic leopards sometimes wear the misplaced title in Africa and Asia. There have been scattered reports of melanistic mountain lions for years in North America, but the reports have never been verified.

Some believe those cats in their melanistic state could be responsible for the sightings across the Mid-South. But conservation officials say it's hard to imagine that such animals could thrive in our region without lots of people gathering rock-solid proof.

"An animal like that has to eat to survive," said Ty Inmon, a West Tennessee conservation officer who has traveled the country hunting a variety of big-game species. "If we had a big population of large cats, you'd have livestock disappearing all over the place, and they'd do some serious damage to the deer herd. You'd have pets disappearing out of people's yards, and somebody would hit one with a car or snap a good picture.

"It would be hard for them to stay hidden for very long."

Mid-South's Bigfoot?
Beyond mistaken identity and the unexpected appearance of animals common to another part of the globe, some believe there is a third possible explanation for all of the black panther sightings.

Several web sites, including cryptomundo.com and weirld.com, think the black panther could be a cryptid -- a species of animal that has yet to be documented by science.

But as much as biologists would like to believe there's an unknown critter roaming local woods, they're tempering their excitement until they have tangible proof.

"It would be one of the greater stories of my lifetime," Peterson said. "And we certainly don't want to discourage people from reporting strange sightings.

"But at this point, we've had so many false sightings reported that we'll need to see some solid evidence before we get too terribly excited about one."

http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2010/dec/19/black-puzzler/

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

California: Black panther sighting (via Chad Arment)

Possible panther sighting investigated in La Quinta


California Fish and Game officers searched today for what one resident described as ''a large, panther-sized black cat,'' on the roof of a local residence, a sheriff's investigator said.

The cat was spotted at about 8 a.m. in the 78000 block of Calle Remo in La Quinta, said Investigator Matt Diaz of the Riverside County Sheriff's Department.

''They said it was much larger than a house cat and looked more like a black panther,'' Diaz said.

Sheriff's deputies and Fish and Game officers searched several hours, but were unable to find the animal. A neighbor advised deputies that a similar cat was spotted on the La Quinta Dunes Golf Course last week, Diaz said.

The term "black panther" can be applied to several types of large cats and typically refers to a color variant, not a separate species.

http://www.mydesert.com/article/20101016/NEWS01/101016002/Possible-panther-sighting-investigated-in-La-Quinta

California: Black panther sighting (via Chad Arment)

Possible panther sighting investigated in La Quinta


California Fish and Game officers searched today for what one resident described as ''a large, panther-sized black cat,'' on the roof of a local residence, a sheriff's investigator said.

The cat was spotted at about 8 a.m. in the 78000 block of Calle Remo in La Quinta, said Investigator Matt Diaz of the Riverside County Sheriff's Department.

''They said it was much larger than a house cat and looked more like a black panther,'' Diaz said.

Sheriff's deputies and Fish and Game officers searched several hours, but were unable to find the animal. A neighbor advised deputies that a similar cat was spotted on the La Quinta Dunes Golf Course last week, Diaz said.

The term "black panther" can be applied to several types of large cats and typically refers to a color variant, not a separate species.

http://www.mydesert.com/article/20101016/NEWS01/101016002/Possible-panther-sighting-investigated-in-La-Quinta