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100% agree
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I printed out the photo and did measurements and using a generous 16" for the crow that is really turned slightly sideways, the mystery animal is about 40" long including tail and stands 12 " high. The measurements could be off because they aren't in the exact plane, but it is really close.
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Also 100% agree, and more than that, the legs, carpus and paws of a cougar (esp juvinile) are very large and beefy and the ones in the photos are very small I estimate 1.2 inches in diameter at the carpus (wrist).
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I don't know if foxes mark like other canids, I will take your word for it. But, here is where I look at the photo differently. I do not think that it is lifting its leg to mark. Rather I thought it was lifting its leg high to the body to step over or on an object obscured by the leaf, which is a stealthy feline thing to do.
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I think what dissuedes me from a fox is that the head appears blunted in one photo and the tail looks decidedly feline to me, I really see contours and lateral tip curves that are feline, not canine.
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I think it would be really exciting if it really were a cougar and tried to convince myself it was a youngster, but I still can't get around the small lithe size. Weighing the odds of a cougar cub vs large ferral cat I have to go with the more logical of the two although cannot rule that out with 100% confidence. I am an evidenced-based gal and when I see a Unidentified Flying Object, I think it must be a plane or other man-made object with optical llusions at play since I've seen those, not it must be from outer space since there's no evidence to back up the claim.
I hope the OP can get more photos, a better scale reference or physical evidence like hair, scat or footprints to lay this mystery to rest.
I agree that this animal isn't lifting it's leg to mark. Yes, a male fox would do so, but a feline would not. I agree with you that this animal is instead retracting it's leg. Regarding size, a "teenage" (juvenile, not a cub) feline does not have a stocky head and in fact their heads and bodies are rather lean and lithe. It is also a mistake to compare the heft of a zoo animal, one who is fed well and parasite-free, with an animal of wild habitat.