Normally a big cat like that will attack a smaller human if it can jump you from behind. Then it tries to bite on on the back of the neck. So, wear a football helmet and football shoulder pads so that it can't get a good bite.

For most animals of this nature, the standard bait is canned cat foot, covered by a thin layer of lard or grease to keep it from drying out too quickly. I would try to leave it about two feet high on a tree. That way, the smaller animals can't get to it.


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We have friends who live on a rural lake and there were kitty sightings in the area. They had goats too, which is like a Denny's sign on the interstate for a big cat. They go to the mailbox with a big dog and a 12 gauge. There are black bears too.

Hi Nico,

I use "trail cameras" which are triggered by motion and changes in temperature. Depending on the camera you can have it more sensitive ( but will get every little bird in there) or less sensitive. Some can do video. My nicest one, the one I used here, only takes pictures and does have a slight red light when it captures, but it's speed and recovery time are great. Another camera is completely covert when it shoots, but it has a much slower recovery rate between shots.

I have seen this cat before but never even came close to having enough time to take a picture, nor was I anything like this close.

Wouldn't it be nice if there was a wireless link inside that could transmit those images over to your house? You could just sit at home and see what was happening. There are some like that, but the wireless range is pretty limited.

I get scared from Mountain Lions, like the time I saw tracks on top of mine. It was following my tracks, so it must have been aware of me. I camped near by that next night and was a bit freaked. But not enough to go someplace else : )

Or the time the fire was dieing down and I was about to go to sleep, and then I saw two pairs of eyes go by in the dark 100 yards away. I don't know what type of creatures they were, maybe Coyote or Mountain Lions, or Deer? I threw on some logs, and after a while I got tired and just went to sleep anyway.

"Wouldn't it be nice if there was a wireless link inside that could transmit those images over to your house? You could just sit at home and see what was happening. There are some like that, but the wireless range is pretty limited."

One model will send the image wirelessly to a controller that is up to 500 feet away. Then you get the image file from the controller. The purpose behind that is that your valuable images do not exist at the trail camera, so there is little point in a thief trying to steal the camera, and they don't know exactly where the controller is hidden.

Kat will probably need to bury a high-capacity fiber optic cable down her driveway and along the road so that she call haul all of the images back to her place. A year from now we will be paying annual memberships to view her wildlife shots.

I feel privileged to have seen two in 30 years of tramping around these mountains. Ironically, one of those sightings was in our back yard, about 20 feet from my office window. I don't worry about mountain lions. I worry a lot more about human attacks than wildlife attacks.

The eastern Pacific is a sea lion stronghold, with famous dives in British Columbia, California, Galapagos, Mexico and more. The species and water temperatures vary, but the photographic challenge remains the same: capturing elegant pictures of dark, fastmoving subjects in water that is usually gloomy.

A Grey Seal (Halichoerus grypus) poses in the waters off Acadia National Park in Maine. Grey seals live on both coasts of the Northern Atlantic, with breeding colonies in Great Britain, Ireland, and down the eastern coast of North America from Canada down to New Jersey.

Scientists from the U.S. and Greece are working from opposite sides of the ocean to save the Hawaiian (pictured here) and Mediterranean monk seals. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species has declared both species to be critically endangered. Their relative, the Caribbean monk seal, has already gone extinct.

A study conducted in 2010 led researchers to conclude that one-fifth of the world's vertebrates are threatened wtih extinction. Meet some of the marine vertebrate species that are among the threatened in the Backbone of Biodiversity of Risk image gallery.

Watch a recorded webcast about the latest efforts in Greece to study and save the critically endangered Mediterranean monk seal. Centuries of human exploitation and habitat destruction have caused the remaining populations of Mediterranean monk seals (Monachus monachus) and Hawaiian monk seals (Monachus schauinslandi) to drop to perilously low numbers, while the Caribbean monk seal (Monachus tropicalis) has become extinct.

The largest of all seal species, the southern elephant seal (Mirounga leonina) is found in chilly Antarctic and Subantarctic waters. The male seals dive as deep as 1,430 meters (over 4,600 feet) and stay at depth for up to two hours.

A harp seal (Phoca groenlandica) pup rests on the ice at sunset in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada while its mother hunts. Adult harp seals have dappled gray fur, but the babies are born white and are known as "whitecoats." After 12 days of nursing, grey color begins to show and, a week later, the white fur begins to fall out in patches.

Male northern elephant seals face off on the beach by vocalizing through their extended noses, called proboscises. Every winter, when the seals return to the beach where they were born to breed, males arrive first to tussle for territory. The winners of these fights are the "alpha" males, and they get the biggest and best territories. After the beachfront property is divvied among the alpha males, the females arrive for breeding. Learn about how scientists track elephant seals with satellite tags at the Census of Marine Life.

A Galapagos sea lion (Zalophus wollebaeki) rests on a beach in Ecuador. The population of these charming animals swings wildly during El Nio events, but is declining overall. They are currently listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List. See more pictures of animals at risk.

The crabeater seal (Lobodon carcinophaga) is found on the ice of Antarctica, but surprisingly they don't eat crabs! The seals primarily eat krill, tiny crustaceans that play a large part in the Antarctic ecosystem.

Harp seals are protected in the United States by the Marine Mammal Protection Act. Although they are not considered endangered, as sea ice melting earlier and earlier each year, available harp seal breeding grounds are being lost in the North Atlantic and Arctic.

The critically endangered Hawaiian monk seal (Monachus schauinslandi) is one of hundreds of marine species that can be found cruising the waters of Papahnaumokukea, a chain of islands northwest of the main Hawaiian archipelago. Despite living in protected habitat, Hawaiian monk seals frequently become entangled in fishermen's nets, threatening their survival. It's estimated that only around 1,200 individuals survive today. Watch a recorded webcast about the latest efforts in Greece to study and save the critically endangered Mediterranean monk seal.

These southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) may look like beach bums, but when they are in the water hunting, they are anything but. Satellite tracking by tagging the animals has found that, during the 10 months they spend at sea, elephant seals spend most of their time underwater, hunting fish and squid at depths of 1,300 to 3,300 feet (400 to 1,000 meters).

In the deep water, it is very dark, and elephant seals don't have a great sense of smell, like penguins, or the ability to echolocate, like whales, to help them hunt. They can't even see particularly well in daylight -- but in the dark it's a different story. Elephant seals' eyes are specialized for dim light and, in particular, to light at the wavelength of 485 nm -- which is the same wavelength given off by the bioluminescent lanternfish that are the seals' main prey. And the seals preferentially spend more time foraging at the depth where most bioluminescent animals live.

We (and our hounds) will do our best to get you great pictures of mountain lions, like ones below taken on our photo safaris. In the process you just might also see lots of other great subjects such as birds, sunsets, mountains, streams, elk, deer, bear, wolves, sheep, goats, our horses and mules and so many other animals big and small!

Trail cameras are an outdoor enthusiast's best friend. Most are used by deer hunters but turkey hunters and trappers also use them. They can monitor an area 24/7 and provide valuable information as to the size and frequency of deer using a particular area or what furbearers are passing through.

They're often set on trails, scrapes or bait piles to get pictures before and during a particular season. While most pictures are of deer or expected animals, every once in a while something else shows up. Such was the case recently as two trail cams captured images of not-so-common critters in our state.

The first trail cam added another chapter to a decades-old on-going saga: Does Kansas have mountain lions or not? That question has been sufficiently answered with three confirmed cougars within our confines in the last three years. And a trail camera in Republic County snapped a few photos last week of yet another big cat.

"I bought my first trail camera two years ago," said 25-year-old Courtland resident and deer hunter Caleb Mahin. "I've got two now and I basically use them for scouting and I like to see what is out there."

His camera was on a spot on family land and he picked up the camera last Sunday evening but hunted a different spot. It wasn't until after he got home that he checked the images. He had a hard time believing what he was seeing when the first photo popped up. 152ee80cbc

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