they're here in okla also. misguided people see them quite often and think they're black panthers or black cougers but a black couger is scientifically impossable
Just had an encounter with one last week in Arizona. It is extremely rare to see one, especially in Northern Arizona where our cabin is. The one we saw was grey in color, it really does look like a mixture of different animals combined and confuses you when you first look at it.
They're in Southern MO, too. My dad almost ran over one on a gravel road when he was younger and one ran in front of my great-aunt when she was walking on that same gravel road.
Not sure how big the population is, though. For all I know it could have been a group that expanded north and got isolated.
@dwmitch I saw something down at my wife's family farmland a few weeks ago that I couldn't figure out what it was. When I had gotten to the spot of whatever it was over the top of the fallen tree, the thing was absolutely gone. I was about 60 yards from it at the time of sighting. I wondered if it was a black panther but I'm now wondering about a dark gray jaguarundi. It was in south central Madison county in MO.
Ty for the video. We had gotten a jaguarundi from a neighbor, that ran down the jag on a horse, throwing his coat over it. Lucky throw and catch i must say. This was in Cobb County Georgia around 1968. We named him demon for his looks and attitude if he didnt like something.We later got him a mate for the zoo. I can say this much, they're not sweet big house cats. So be very careful , showing them off to friends. These cats can slice a human up in a heart beat if things go wrong.
I ma cat lover,but "jug" is the cat from the hell !
nedeljko18 4 months ago
they're here in okla also. misguided people see them quite often and think they're black panthers or black cougers but a black couger is scientifically impossable
wolfy62490 5 months ago
Just had an encounter with one last week in Arizona. It is extremely rare to see one, especially in Northern Arizona where our cabin is. The one we saw was grey in color, it really does look like a mixture of different animals combined and confuses you when you first look at it.
sorich 8 months ago
They're in Southern MO, too. My dad almost ran over one on a gravel road when he was younger and one ran in front of my great-aunt when she was walking on that same gravel road.
Not sure how big the population is, though. For all I know it could have been a group that expanded north and got isolated.
dwmitch 1 year ago
@dwmitch I saw something down at my wife's family farmland a few weeks ago that I couldn't figure out what it was. When I had gotten to the spot of whatever it was over the top of the fallen tree, the thing was absolutely gone. I was about 60 yards from it at the time of sighting. I wondered if it was a black panther but I'm now wondering about a dark gray jaguarundi. It was in south central Madison county in MO.
ALIENWarriorX 9 months ago
Ty for the video. We had gotten a jaguarundi from a neighbor, that ran down the jag on a horse, throwing his coat over it. Lucky throw and catch i must say. This was in Cobb County Georgia around 1968. We named him demon for his looks and attitude if he didnt like something.We later got him a mate for the zoo. I can say this much, they're not sweet big house cats. So be very careful , showing them off to friends. These cats can slice a human up in a heart beat if things go wrong.
lukilotus 1 year ago
Fascinating. It seems caught in the middle of being a weasel & a typical cat. Like catching evolution red-handed.
DanceswithUtube 1 year ago