Sunday, 24 February 2008

Sighting of the Week

Northamptonshire, Wellingborough area, 17 Feb 2008, 2.30 p.m.
A family of four out for a walk all saw a very large black cat.

"We were going for a long walk through the fields; the area was deserted and quiet; weather beautiful. I was ahead of my husband and children and had just turned into a gap in the hedgerow to go into the next field, when I noticed a big brown/ black animal about 5m away from the hedgerow/ spinney; I thought at first it was another Muntjac deer, but then the tail was clearly far too long and big and it moved like a cat; it jumped away once my husband and (noisy) children had caught up with me."

Other sightings reported over the last fortnight include Lynx (2), and large cats of different colours: grey (2), fawn (1), and the ubiquitous black (11).

Big cats in the media

Some of the media reports of big cat sightings across the country.

Under discussion...

The BCIB members' email list has been busy over the last fortnight. Here's one of the topics under discussion...

Wild boar and big cats
Might our growing population of wild boar be predated by big cats? Dr Martin Goulding of the British Wild Boar website replies:-


"Wild boar are very good at defending themselves and a big cat is unlikely to risk injury taking on a adult boar. Juvenile boar and piglets may be taken though, and this is known to occur in Polish forests with lynx predating small boar. "


Sunday, 10 February 2008

Speakers' Lineup -- 2

In our second feature on the speakers who will share their expertise with us at the BCIB conference, we meet three more experienced researchers who seek out mystery cats -- and other even more mysterious creatures.

For more details about the conference, at Tropiquaria in Somerset the weekend of the 7th March, please see the BCIB website.

Rick Minter -- Living With Big Cats in Britain
People's reactions to big cats in Britain range from the disbelieving, to the sceptical, to the open minded. Others are convinced these predators are here, and see it as exciting, some people are concerned, while still others regard it as a quirky issue of no great consequence. Some people worry about what they should do if confronted by a big cat, while others are desperate to get more conclusive photographic evidence. The range of human reactions is quite natural, but perhaps more important is the reaction of actual witnesses.

Richard Freeman -- Big Cats Around the World
Richard is the zoological director of the Centre for Fortean Zoology (CFZ). After school he became a zookeeper at Twycross Zoo in the West Midlands and became head keeper of reptiles. He worked with over 400 exotic species from ants to elephants but had a special interest in crocodilians. In 1995 he took a degree in zoology at Leeds University.

Richard has undertaken a number of cryptozoological expeditions including:
  • Thailand in 2000 to look for a species of giant crested snake known as the naga.
  • Sumatra in 2003 to search for the upright walking ape orang-pendek.
  • Sumatra in 2004 again to look for the orang-pendek.
  • Mongolia in 2005 on the track of the deathworm.
  • The Gambia in 2006 to search for a dragon like beast known as ninki-nanka.

In many cases he has been the first westerner to visit certain places such as remote, unexplored caves, valleys and oasis.

Chris Hall -- Teesside

Chris has been looking at the big cat phenomenon since he first encountered reports of the now legendary beast of Exmoor in the daily papers of 1983.

Teesside, located in North East England, is a major industrial area, with massive petrochemical sites, other industries, and many urban centres. So it may seem rather peculiar, if not downright strange that it should have any sightings of large out-of-place cats at all.

The main activity in the area is concentrated on two hotspots: the Castle Eden walkway, and the village of Elswick, near Hartlepool. Other sightings form a rough triangle around this part of southeast Durham, and North Cleveland.

The nearby villages of Sedgefield, Trimdon, Ferryhill, Wingate, Wynyard, Stillington and Billingham have all reported sightings over the last twenty years or so.

Sighting of the week

Devon
Dunsford area, 28 January 2008.
A witness was driving home at 1:30 a.m. when she met what she judged to be a lynx crossing a river bridge. The cat, which was grey with darker stripes and big ear tufts, trotted towards her clearly visible in the headlights. The bridge had brick walls on either side, and the cat had nowhere to go, but seemed unbothered by her car. She was able to watch it for about 15 seconds as she drove right up to it.
"The look I got was, ' What are YOU doing on my bridge?' "

Other reports this week...

Large black cats have been reported from Ramsgate (Kent), Selsley (Gloucestershire), and Moreton (Dorset).

A lynx has been reported in the Newton Bromswold area of Northamptonshire, and a BCIB investigator has visited the area which they judged to be good cat country.

Strange footprints in the snow were observed near the summit of Benarty Hill, Fife.

Cats in the Media

Conference on big cat sightings. North-West Evening Mail, 6 February 2008.

Hunt for black panther after sighting in the woods. Irish Examiner, 5 February 2008.

Big cat sightings in Fen region on the increase. 8 February 2008.

Big cat spotted was probably a Lynx, experts claim. County Times Gazette, 8 February 2008.

Friday, 1 February 2008

Sighting of the Week

Northern Ireland, County Antrim.
Belfast area -- on 20 of January 2008, at 2:20 p.m., a couple out hillwalking with their dog saw what they first thought was a deer watching them. As they looked, it moved, and when they saw a side profile, they realised it was not a deer but a big cat of a beige straw/amber colour. It circled around behind them at a distance of about 100 metres, then 'vanished'. Seriously alarmed, they phoned 999 for assistance.

"The sighting was very thrilling and very frightening, and now it's over we are having to pinch ourselves."

Speakers' Lineup -- 1

This week and next, we bring you brief notes on the speakers who are currently set to share their expertise with us at this year's BCIB conference. For more details about the conference, at Tropiquaria on the weekend of the 7th of March, please check the BCIB website.

Jonathan McGowan - Dorset
Jonathan McGowan is Assistant Curator at the Bournemouth Natural Sciences Society, and head of its Mammals section. He is a native of Dorset, an expert on both its rare and common fauna, and has observed both puma and panther-like big cats in the wild in the county several times, the first occasion being while he was badger-watching in 1984.

"I have always been a keen naturalist and watched wildlife extensively. I have had many sightings of non-indigeneous cats since 1984. I believe they should be throughly investigated, for many reasons."
At the conference Jonathan will take us through seven years of intensive study into the sightings and evidence for large cats in Dorset. This will be presented via slides showing tree scratches, prints animal kills, maps and scat. An experienced lecturer, he will present a convincing case for the animals' existence.

Dr Darren Naish - Hampshire
Darren Naish is a palaeontologist interested in living mammals and other animals as much as in extinct ones. He has a long-standing interest inBritish big cats and has examined field evidence which he is convinced was produced by lynxes and other large felids. The evidence that large felids are living wild in Britain is scientifically compelling, but unfortunately few scientists seem even aware of it.

Darren hopes to bring this body of evidence to wider attention among zoologists.

He runs the Tetrapod Zoology blog.

Jonathan Downes - CFZ and Big Cats
Jonathan has searched for Lake Monsters at Loch Ness, pursued sea serpents and birdmen in Cornwall, chased big cats across west country moorland, and in 1998 went to Latin America in search of the grotesque vampiric Chupacabra.

In 1992 he founded the Centre for Fortean Zoology (CFZ), with the aim of coordinating research into mystery animals, bizarre and aberrant animal behaviour and his own particular love of zooform phenomena.