WEEKLY UPDATES
Keep tabs on news, events and market changes from the Lake Regions in Maine.
click here to subscribe


RECREATIONAL GUIDELINES BOOKLET
Enjoy your favorite activities the safe way.
Click here to request your free copy.


Buffer Handbook
A guide to creating a vegetative buffer for lakefront properties.
Click here to receive this free handbook.

Maine Lakefront Real Estate

Lake Living magazine has been described as "the Downeast Magazine of the Sebago Region" Click here for a free copy of this award-winning magazine!



Our Maine lakefront experts are standing by to help you. Views and news about Maine lakes and lakefront homes See why the Mr. Lakefront team provides superior information and unsurpassed service Read the latest news about lakes and ponds across the state Educate yourself about buying lakefront property Find information about hundreds of Maine lakes and ponds Browse available Maine lakefront properties

Maine Shoreland
Zoning -
A Handbook For Shoreland Owners
A "Must Have" for every Maine lakefront homeowner.
Send us your info and receive this free 42 page handbook:
Name:

*Email:

Phone:

Comment:

*required


Maine lakefront property, Lakefront property in Maine, Lakefront property Maine, Maine lakefront real estate

The latest news about Maine lakes and ponds.

State Probes Mountain-Lion Reports

June 24, 2009 - WINSLOW -- A reported sighting of a mountain lion late Monday afternoon by a woman and her son has caught the interest of state experts.

Informed of the Winslow sighting Tuesday, Wally Jakubas, mammal-group leader for Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife and the agency's point person on mountain lions, said there had been another possible mountain lion report last week in northern Augusta, in which a feces sample, also known as scat, was recovered and is being analyzed.

Although about 20 sightings are reported annually, there have been only two scientifically confirmed cases of mountain lions in Maine: The first was in 1938 near the Maine-Quebec border, and the second was in 1995 in Cape Elizabeth.

Mountain lions are also known as cougars and pumas. State officials believe most mountain lion sightings, if they're legitimate, are of animals that were captive and have been released.

"I'm intrigued," Jakubas said. "We had this report of the scat (in Augusta). The important thing is, these are unconfirmed reports and the general history of these things is, when you look into them, they don't pan out."

Even so, the Winslow sighting "is a very convincing story," he said, and a state biologist from the department's Sidney office is investigating.

The sighting occurred around 4:45 p.m. Lin Stout said she and her sons Cullen, 9, and Liam, 5, were at a swing set in their backyard off South Ridge Drive when they saw the long tail bobbing through ferns and brush. They live on a five-acre property within a subdivision that is surrounded by woods.

The tan tail, standing about 3 feet high, had a 3-inch, dark brown tip, Stout said. It was about 20 feet away, she said. Cullen ran back to the house; Liam and his mother watched.

"My 5-year-old say, 'Mommy, a lion's tail!' I said, 'It's not like a lion you see at the zoo; it's a mountain lion,' " Stout said.

Stout said they were about 30 feet away from the house and back deck. They froze as the tail vanished back into the brush.

"We did not hear any snaps of twigs, no crunches of leaves; it was like it was a ghost," Stout said.

Stout said she and her son began slowly walking back toward the house when the animal stepped out from the woods – in full view – less than 20 feet away from them. It was clearly a mountain lion, Stout said, describing the animal as perhaps weighing 130 pounds, with a large, catlike face, yellow eyes, "huge" paws and that long tail they had seen in the brush.

Racing through Stout's mind was the thought of what she would do if the animal leaped at them. She decided to drop to the ground and cover her son, if it came to that.

But Stout said the mountain lion seemed focused on a nearby marsh area. Stout said they began slowly backing up because the mountain lion seemed not to be interested in them.

"It didn't look menacing to us; it didn't growl or show its teeth," Stout said. "It was looking at the marsh."

Then, as Stout picked up her son, the 5-year-old screamed.
"I think he realized then this was a very large animal and it was wild," she said. "That startled the animal, but it did not ever come at us."

That's also when Stout finally saw what the animal had been fixated on: a black domestic cat that had wandered into the marsh area. Liam, she said, screamed, "Run, kitty, run!"

Stout said the mountain lion then took one giant leap back into the woods. The entire encounter with the animal in full view lasted perhaps 30 seconds, Stout said.

After the encounter, Stout contacted Charles Theobald, animal control officer for the Winslow Police Department.

The animal fit the description of an Eastern mountain lion, Theobald said. He suggested that the Stouts take extra precautions when going out in the area – such as having the kids wear bells.

"It's wildlife; it's Maine," Theobald said. "You're going to come across wildlife."

There's no evidence of a sustained, wild population of mountain lions in Maine, Jakubas said. The nearest such populations are in Iowa and Michigan – it's debated whether they are wild in Quebec – and so legitimate sightings of mountain lions likely involve animals that have been released into the wild, he said.

By SCOTT MONROE, Morning Sentinel June 24, 2009


Lakes:
Regions:


Print this story

Email this story

return to Lake News



37 Roosevelt Trail . PO Box 970 . South Casco . ME 04077
Phone: 207-655-8787 . E-mail: info@mrlakefront.net




HOME | MAINE LAKEFRONT LOCATOR | LAKESMART | LAKEFRONT 101
MAINE LAKE NEWS | ABOUT US | CONTACT US | OUR LISTINGS | SITE MAP
Privacy Policy: Your information will be held in the strictest confidence and will never be shared or sold.
© 2010 Mr. Lakefront, Inc.