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I'm not too far from LeRoy and I hear about mountain lion sightings about 3 times a year, every year. Every story imaginable is passed around. Yet, no one has ever produced a clear track (their tracks are easy to identify), a good photo or a dead cat (either from a road kill or a person killing one). Everyone says they'll shoot and ask questions later, yet no dead cats. Tens of thousands of hunters roaming the woods with digital cameras, guns, trail cams and predator calls. Thousands of trappers looking to draw in predators with baits. All this and no proof of a mountain lion. This is why I think often times when someone sees a cat in the dark, it's automatically a mountain lion until someone can prove it isn't. With me, it's never a mountain lion, unless someone can prove it is. Why take the side of the least likely occurrence when there are so many other possibilities that are hundreds of times more likely? Even in areas where mountains population exist in good numbers they are still a rare animal that the average person is likely never going see. In NY bobcats are becoming more numerous every year and a large bobcat is an imposing looking animal.
I'm not too far from LeRoy and I hear about mountain lion sightings about 3 times a year, every year. Every story imaginable is passed around. Yet, no one has ever produced a clear track (their tracks are easy to identify), a good photo or a dead cat (either from a road kill or a person killing one). Everyone says they'll shoot and ask questions later, yet no dead cats. Tens of thousands of hunters roaming the woods with digital cameras, guns, trail cams and predator calls. Thousands of trappers looking to draw in predators with baits. All this and no proof of a mountain lion. This is why I think often times when someone sees a cat in the dark, it's automatically a mountain lion until someone can prove it isn't. With me, it's never a mountain lion, unless someone can prove it is. Why take the side of the least likely occurrence when there are so many other possibilities that are hundreds of times more likely? Even in areas where mountains population exist in good numbers they are still a rare animal that the average person is likely never going see. In NY bobcats are becoming more numerous every year and a large bobcat is an imposing looking animal.