I was running on an unused logging road and came up behind a wild cat. It didn’t see me coming, so I got pretty close, maybe 20 feet away. It turned and stared at me for a second and then took off up a steep hill.

It was about 2.5 feet to the top of it’s head, a little smaller than a Labrador. It wasn’t a bobcat or lynx, because it had a long tail, but I don’t think it was long enough to be a mountain lions tail(I don’t remember seeing it curled). It had a brown coat and the tail had a stripey bit at the tip. 100% a cat from the body shape and movement.

But after looking it up, it seems like mountain lions basically don’t exist in new england, or at least are extremely rare. Its limbs were not as thick as the mountain lion images I’m finding online.

I thought maybe it was one of those megasized housecats, but this trail is separated from town by a deep and wide river, any housecat would have had to walk 3 miles and across 2 bridges(one of which is a metal mesh footbridge) or 7 miles along the logging road to get to the nearest house. It’s also below freezing out and there’s 5+ inches of snow on the ground.

It’s making me feel like I hallucinated this or something, because it doesn’t seem possible. Hopefully I’ll see it again now that I’ve looked at a ton of wild cat pictures. I was trying to remember as much detail as possible when I saw it, but I didn’t know what to look for.

  • Beaver [he/him]@hexbear.net
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    5 months ago

    This response is the one that makes the most sense to me. In particular, I trust LanyrdSkynrd’s perception of it’s shape and movements as being “cat”, but it can be surprisingly difficult to judge the size of an animal in the bush. Seems hard to believe that you could misidentify a tail where there was none (otherwise it would be Case Closed, You Saw A Bobcat). The Cougar/Mountain Lion hypothesis is not crazy. There are no permanent populations in New England, but it was part of their historic range, and they do show up on occasion. A juvenile mountain lion would fit your description, and they can definitely swim across water obstacles. But I had to bet on something, I would say that it was probably an escaped or feral exotic housecat hybrid.

    It’s pretty interesting that you were able to surprise it, cats are usually so alert to their surroundings. Maybe it was hunting, and just zeroed in on it’s prey?

    I love these kinds of mysteries, because there is usually no concrete answer, but exploring it helps us understand our natural world.

    • jack [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      5 months ago

      It’s pretty interesting that you were able to surprise it, cats are usually so alert to their surroundings. Maybe it was hunting, and just zeroed in on it’s prey?

      This is a good case for it being a formerly captive animal - it might just perceive humans as nbd. A mountain lion would probably be far more aware of humans in its vicinity than the inverse. But if it was a young one, who knows.

    • LanyrdSkynrd [comrade/them, any]@hexbear.netOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      5 months ago

      It’s pretty interesting that you were able to surprise it, cats are usually so alert to their surroundings. Maybe it was hunting, and just zeroed in on it’s prey?

      I was surprised by that too. I had turned around to head back when I encountered it, so I had passed that point 10-15 minutes before.

      The occurred to me in that moment that I might have been the prey, but in retrospect I doubt it.