Friday, June 17, 2011

Not in My Backyard! The Case of the Runaway Mountain Lion.

Oh no! First it was the moose on the Merritt, now it's the mountain lion!!!

The first sightings were last week in Greenwich, a mountain lion in CT...no way. The news told us that mountain lions have not been seen in CT since the late 1800's and that it was probably someone's pet. How a "pet" of that size could escape without being reported is beyond me, but whatever.

A week later, the news flash was that a mountain lion had been hit by an SUV and killed in Milford. So the question was wether or not it was the same "cat". This mountain lion had to have done a fair amount of running without being seen in the interim to end up in Milford.

Now, a few days later, I read that there were two sightings in Greenfield Hill in Fairfield...minutes from my home. I called up my husband to tell him and he asked if I thought that the coyote he saw with our dog was really a mountain lion instead. I couldn't help it, but I had to say it...the mountain lion wouldn't have barked...it would have meowed or worse, roared!

All kidding aside, here is info that the Fairfield Police Department has put out.


The recommended precautions at home are:
• Keep children indoors around dawn and dusk
• Do not feed wildlife that would be a potential prey
• Install or use motion detector lighting, especially near sidewalks
and pathways
• Scatter mothballs and ammonia-soaked scraps of cloth around your yard

Face to face with a mountain lion:
• Do not approach
• Gather and protect your children
• Keep eye contact and back away slowly, without running
• Give the mountain lion an avenue for escape

In wooded areas:
• Hike with a group, not alone
• Hike with a dog on a leash
• Keep children in close proximity
• Keep standing, even if you pick up a child
• Carry a walking stick or pepper spray, stones –
any weapon that comes to hand.

Any sightings should be reported to the Police Department’s emergency communication center at 203 254-4800, so officers can be dispatched to the area.

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