Why has nobody considered a more human approach? (Other than call your local Game & Wildlife and have them deal with it...)
Call me a bleeding heart liberal, but these big cats are living creatures just like you're chickens and calves that they're carrying off. And the only injustice they're doing is trying to survive. It's not their fault you decided to build your homestead in the middle of what once was their territory.
I don't understand why people automatically assume they have the right to come in, bulldoze everything over and take out whatever gets in their way all for the sake of their "little piece of heaven on earth". It's irrational and dangerous.
Instead of using a 22 mm rifle, or the SSS method of dealing with the animal why not call and ask for a wildlife relocation effort? Tranquilizers work just as well as bullets- actually better, because nobody has to lose their life.
I understand you're concern for your family and your flock but have you looked at the flip side of the situation? Perhaps the mountain lion is encrouching on "your" land because her natural food supply is running low where developers have forced her to move. Or to feed her pack of cubs?
But nobody considers that aspect. Shoot first and ask questions later.
Typical American mentality.
Call me a bleeding heart liberal, but these big cats are living creatures just like you're chickens and calves that they're carrying off. And the only injustice they're doing is trying to survive. It's not their fault you decided to build your homestead in the middle of what once was their territory.
I don't understand why people automatically assume they have the right to come in, bulldoze everything over and take out whatever gets in their way all for the sake of their "little piece of heaven on earth". It's irrational and dangerous.
Instead of using a 22 mm rifle, or the SSS method of dealing with the animal why not call and ask for a wildlife relocation effort? Tranquilizers work just as well as bullets- actually better, because nobody has to lose their life.
I understand you're concern for your family and your flock but have you looked at the flip side of the situation? Perhaps the mountain lion is encrouching on "your" land because her natural food supply is running low where developers have forced her to move. Or to feed her pack of cubs?
But nobody considers that aspect. Shoot first and ask questions later.
Typical American mentality.