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Mountain lion in San Francisco

  1. #1
    Quick Mix Ready Dark Matter [jealously defalcate my upanishad]
    I could of been clever and said "Cougar" but you young homo's wouldnt be interested in that.

    They're not even on Mount Davis hiding in the woods anymore they're coming into the neighborhoods.
    More and more Coyotes and wild life is looking for food. pets, kids, small people
  2. #2
    We had a Tiger on the loose here in a Houston neighborhood last week. The owner turned out to be on bail for murder too...he manged to recapture the tiger and put it in the back of his SUV and then went on the run for a week. He then showed up without the tiger, was arrest...REBAILED...and then a day or two later showed up to turn the tiger in.

    Just another day in Paradise.

  3. #3
    Quick Mix Ready Dark Matter [jealously defalcate my upanishad]
    Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson We had a Tiger on the loose here in a Houston neighborhood last week. The owner turned out to be on bail for murder too…he manged to recapture the tiger and put it in the back of his SUV and then went on the run for a week. He then showed up without the tiger, was arrest…REBAILED…and then a day or two later showed up to turn the tiger in.

    Just another day in Paradise.


    I saw that on our local news. Beautiful animal. The fucker is lucky it didnt turn on some child and run off with it. honestly the cougars out here are about as big as that fucking thing. I came across one in the hills were I used to hike. we had a state park near the house I had. I used to run into a few hikers daily and both of them warned me they saw a cougar (they call them mountain lions out here) and to be careful. I was walking my little staffordshire pit but he was a runt pup and never grew larger than a basset hound. and he would tear after cats. of course we walked up on it. it was down in a ravine and I turned to walk my dog the other way then I walked backwards.. confused my dog a bit but I kept him walking. ran into a park ranger and told her about it. they said they had a monitor on it. knew it came out of Mount Diablo which is connected to this park.
  4. #4
    Apparently the Tiger was just a "kitten"...10 months old.
  5. #5
    Quick Mix Ready Dark Matter [jealously defalcate my upanishad]
    Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson Apparently the Tiger was just a "kitten"…10 months old.

    it didnt look full grown.

    3 guys got munched on for throwing their shoe at a full grown Tiger at the San Francisco Zoo.

    Christmas 2007.

    https://latimesblogs.latimes.com/unleashed/2011/02/tiger-maul-teens-san-francisco-zoo-provoked-report.html


    Tiger that mauled three teens at San Francisco Zoo appears to have been provoked, report says
    February 12, 2011 | 2:53 pm
    Tatiana A female Siberian tiger killed in a hail of police gunfire after fatally mauling a man at the San Francisco Zoo on Christmas Day 2007 likely was provoked into leaping and clawing out of its enclosure, a federal investigator said in documents obtained by The Associated Press.

    The tiger named Tatiana killed 17-year-old Carlos Sousa Jr. and injured his friends, brothers Paul and Kulbir Dhaliwal, leaving claw marks etched in the asphalt and claw fragments in the bushes outside its pen.
  6. #6
    Originally posted by Quick Mix Ready The tiger named Tatiana

    She sounds hot.
  7. #7
    Quick Mix Ready Dark Matter [jealously defalcate my upanishad]
    Originally posted by Jiggaboo_Johnson She sounds hot.

    Too late. They rittled the bitch with bullets. She was acting Ghetto af. it says 1 died but another died from their injury I believe. its weird someone posted that in a blog 4 years later. that wasnt the original news release. I just googled what was first
  8. #8
    Bradley Black Hole
    We have a similar thing happen with mountain lions, one will stalk for awhile and then the police will roll up, give it a bunch of meat like hamburger or whatever they can buy 50lb of at hte nearest store, throw it at the thing and 2 wisconsin state patrol will shoot it at hte same time nboth at the spine while it's eating, if it's runs at anyone before they get there the responding officers just go dumper on em

    San Fransicos is full of pusy ass bitches
  9. #9
    Bradley Black Hole
    i personally like BOb Cats cuz it looks liek a giant evil pink panthrer with muscles ons teroids
  10. #10
    Ghost Black Hole
    one time when I was a kid in school I saw a fucking moose walk by the window

  11. #11
    Originally posted by Ghost one time when I was a kid in school I saw a fucking moose walk by the window


    Fat chicks everywhere mate.
  12. #12
    stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Missouri will be having its first bear hunting season:


    Missouri black bear hunting season plan announced
    NEWS
    by: Michelle Madaras

    Posted: May 18, 2020


    ST. LOUIS – The Missouri Department of Conservation just announced the framework for a black bear hunting season.

    The black bear population in Missouri is on the rise by about 9 percent a year, according to the Missouri Department of Conservation, bring the population to somewhere between 500 and 800 bears.

    Now the state is working on instating a black bear hunting season. It would start on the third Monday of October beginning in 2021. It would last for 10 days or until the quota is met in the three zones which divide between part of the lake of the Ozarks, Mark Twain National Forest, and Southwestern Missouri.

    “It would be open for either firearms or archery. The current proposal does not allow for using bait or using dogs,” explains Dan Zarlenga with the Missouri Department of Conservation.

    There would be a lottery for permits which would cost $25 and there would be a $10 application fee. They’re still deciding how many permits would be granted.
  13. #13
    stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    I live in the inner ring of St. Louis County and this bear was spotted just a couple of miles from my home just a week and a half ago and was all over the news.



    Bear tranquilized in residential neighborhood in Richmond Heights after roaming St. Louis County suburbs
    Janelle O'Dea , David Carson May 10, 2021


    RICHMOND HEIGHTS — A juvenile black bear was safely captured by the Missouri Department of Conservation on Sunday evening, causing a hubbub in the neighborhood as he was loaded into a crate and driven away.

    The scene in the residential neighborhood was tense while the Clayton Fire Department tried to get the 150-pound bear out of a tree in front of a home at the intersection of Buck and East Linden avenues. The bear didn’t immediately lose consciousness after being hit with a tranquilizer dart, and climbed higher into the tree before drowsily climbing down.

    Conservation officials said the unnamed 1.5 to 2-year-old bear will be taken far out into the country, checked for vital signs and then released when he awakens. His ears will be tagged so conservation officials will be able to identify him.

    Bear sightings were reported throughout the weekend from Fenton to Sunset Hills, Webster Groves and Brentwood.

    On Saturday, it was the first day of the season for one of Drew Boeker’s baseball teams, and a pregame adrenaline rush came from an unexpected source: a bear.

    Drew, 12, and his family were driving on Sappington Road on the way to the game when Drew called out, “Dad! That was a bear!”

    Tim Boeker pulled over, and the family, including mom, Laura Boeker, watched the bear run along the fence between the road and the grounds of Ursuline Academy in Oakland at about 7:30 p.m., Laura Boeker said in a Facebook message on Sunday morning.

    As the bear wandered in its slow, lopsided way into nearby residential yards, several other cars followed the Boekers’ example and pulled over to bear witness.

    “At first, we thought that it couldn’t really be a bear, maybe a really big dog?!” Boeker said. “And then it was very obvious it was a bear.” The bruin’s face and the way it ran gave it away, she said.

    “He hopped a little like our puppy, who is 40 pounds at only 6 months,” she said. The bear crossed the street at one point, and traffic slowed to let the large woodland creature pass.

    “He looked like he wanted to climb a tree, but I think all the cars scared him,” Boeker said.

    The Boekers and the rest of the motorists, according to Laura Boeker’s account, acted as the Missouri Department of Conservation urges people act when encountering a bear: Stay calm, keep your distance and do not feed.

    The state’s black bear management plan says there are an estimated 540 to 840 black bears in the state as of 2019, and that the bear population is growing.

    A bear was also spotted at the Brentwood Swim and Tennis Club about 2:30 p.m. Sunday, according to social media posts. It was likely the same bear later captured in Richmond Heights and seen the day before, according to conservation officials.

    Bears are most active in the southern part of the state, but right now is the time they’d be seen traversing unusual paths, per the report: “Black bear sightings tend to be seasonal, with a distinct peak of activity occurring in May and June, during breeding and when natural foods are scarce and bears forage in areas where they are likely to be seen.”

    Homeowners are advised to keep their yards, trash bins and properties clean and free from debris at all times, but particularly during these months.

    The Kirkwood Police Department made its own bear-aware post, and it placed extra emphasis on one instruction:

    “NO SELFIES,” the Facebook post read.

    Mandy Drozda, 44, was driving home from her son, Owen’s, 10, club baseball game on Saturday evening, and wanted to give her daughter Ada, 13, who was visiting with a friend, a heads-up.

    “I basically just said, ‘Hey, I know you girls are out walking around, I want to make sure you’re aware there’s a bear in the area, and don’t mess with him,’” Drozda told the Post-Dispatch in a Facebook Messenger voice message.

    She learned the bear was seen at Webster Hills United Methodist Church at Berry Road and West Lockwood Avenue. That was about a mile and a half away from where the Boekers saw a bear.

    She wanted to catch a glimpse, and stopped near Mary Queen of Peace school in Webster Groves, where she saw two police cars idling near the gymnasium. The bear in a tree near the cars, and Drozda and two of her sons were able to snap a few photos.

    “It was pretty amazing,” Drozda said.

    Laura Boeker was excited to send photos and video of “Bear-ington” (the bear on Sappington) or “Glen” (as in Glendale), as other parents at the baseball game dubbed him, to her niece, who attends Ursuline, whose mascot is the bears.

    After a bear made his final stop Sunday in a Richmond Heights neighborhood, Ron Clipper drove in from Maplewood with his daughter to see the action.

    “We need to send the cubs and the bears back to Chicago — this is Cardinals town,” Clipper said.

    Sara Diggins and Rachel Rice with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch contributed to this report.
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