[Jacob-list] predator question
Neal Grose
nlgrose at yadtel.net
Fri Sep 28 16:55:45 EDT 2012
Well, I and several other people here in our foothills NC community have indeed seen a Mountain lion, but he seemed to be moving through to somewhere else. The wildlife agent confirmed the description and said that they think many of these are released “pets” (which, by the way, are not illegal to keep since they are no longer considered “native wildlife”, and if your county does not specifically prohibit keeping of exotic animals.)
Small ears, tail as long as the rest of the body, and a “loose jointed” gait on the front shoulders, they are hard to confuse with a dog or small bear. Plus I found footprints.
Neal Grose
From: marguerite van beek
Sent: Friday, September 28, 2012 3:02 PM
To: Richard and Susan
Cc: jacob-list at jacobsheep.com ; Karen Askounis
Subject: Re: [Jacob-list] predator question
Susan
They say the same thing about Mountain Lions over here in NJ. They don't exist, yet they have many reported sightings throughout NJ. Our vet several yrs ago and a few miles from our farm went out on a emergency call for a reported attack on two horses. The State kept stating it was a bear attack, the vet who was from S. Dakota said you are sadly mistaken this was done by a mountain Lion (horses had claw marks down their hind end) then they said that he had to keep quiet about this and they did ended up catching a breeding pair. But they still say they don't exist. You can't protect your sheep from a mountain lion almost impossible.
Peggy
On Fri, Sep 28, 2012 at 2:38 PM, Richard and Susan <stcroft at ptd.net> wrote:
Here in southeastern Pennsylvania an occasional coyote attack on sheep will occur. A few yrs. ago a farmer lost several adult ewes to a group of coyotes at a location not far from us – and we have heard coyotes calling at night but have never lost any sheep. Interestingly, here throughout the state there are many reported sightings of mountain lions but the Pennsylvania Game Commission is adamant that they don’t exist. We have never seen one or had a problem – however, a farmer only a few miles from us occasionally sees a mountain lion drinking from his pond. Upstate the mountain folks who know the woods like the “backs of their hands” are equally adamant that they repeatedly see mountain lions – which really are not easy to confuse with other wild feline types in our State – our bobcats are quite a bit smaller with no tail, etc. All that to say that any shepherd or farmer who complains to our state’s Game Commission of a mountain lion killing will not receive a lot of support – since they don’t exist!
A few years ago we had an adult ewe killed by a neighbor’s Siberian Husky – the dog was not aggressive to humans but sheep brought out his primal instincts – and in that situation the dog was interested only in the chase and the kill – he did not tear open the carcass or eat anything whatsoever. He also wounded a ewe lamb so severely she had to be euthanized. Our local police advised us that our State laws permit us to shoot on sight any animal that is killing out livestock. This particular dog was a family pet, very sweet to humans and a nice dog – but the State Dog Catcher required that they relinquish ownership and the husky was put into a husky rescue – and hopefully he ended up living somewhere far from sheep!!
Sue Martin
Stonecroft
From: jacob-list-bounces at jacobsheep.com [mailto:jacob-list-bounces at jacobsheep.com] On Behalf Of Karen Askounis
Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2012 11:41 PM
To: jacob-list at jacobsheep.com
Subject: [Jacob-list] predator question
For those of you who have lost sheep to coyotes is it common to have almost nothing remaining after the attack? I have lost two ram lambs (one at a time) – the first one simply was gone without a trace! No blood, no wool, no wool or hair over or under fences – nothing. The second one – as is usually the case – my most favorite sheep of all time L – found one piece of hide, some bits of wool, his tail, no blood anywhere in pasture, again no wool or hair on any exterior fences. These were ram lambs about 6 months old. They were in with a donkey. Not sure if I should be mad at the donkey or happy he kept losses to one lamb each time. This pasture had a hot wire across the top but no lower predator hot wire (until last weekend, after the fact of course). There were a few spots where the ground had washed away a bit under the fence leaving some space under the fence where I figure they got in. Does this sound like a pack of coyotes or should I be looking for something else? We are in north eastern Illinois. Not sure what other predators to be thinking of.
On a slightly different subject – does anyone think sheep with un-docked tails are easier for predators to catch??
Karen Askounis
Three Fates Farm
Crete, IL
kaskounis at threefatesjacobs.com
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