F
Faeden
Guest
Hi Andy
I believe that there are reports of a adults and a youngster being seen, even 3 together, i think its possible that they are breeding, but i would think its rare due to the small numbers, so the population never becomes to large. they are mostly sighted on unused paths and railway lines they seem to use straight travel ways to navigate around.
I am no expert on animal attack wounds either but if a large cat is going to bring a deer or stag down it will go for the throat and more than not even if the wounds are severe you will see individual puncture marks and small holes also you might find deep scratch marks on the body sometimes 4 in a row, look around the carcass for large foot prinks with deep claw marks at the tops of the toes be remember some dog prints in mud can look larger than they are because when a dog puts pressure on the mud the print is exaggerated because all the mud squishes outwards, also look for lengthy drag marks in the ground, a large cat will often kill its prey and drag it out of the open so can eat undisturbed.
I have done work for anti hunting groups who film there activities, sometimes secretly, and I have seen footage a few different cases in fact where even after the deer had been killed or trapped some of the hunters started stabbing and ripping at it in a ritualistic frenzy, and cheering on others to join in, some people are just plan sick and enjoy doing these things for nothing more than pleasure. I used to walk along rivers with my dog and would sometimes come across beautiful stags that had been shot and just dumped into shallow rivers, and often they had knife marks on them, but an animal that has been butcherd by a knife, and one thats been killed by a large cat I think would be fairly easy to distinguish between if you look close enough. Also look around for other animal hair that doesnt belong to the prey. Also they lick the meat with there tongues which strips it of in a sand paper type way, which can show signs.
All the best
Faeden
I would have thought though that any large cats that were released by owners due to the 1976 dangerous wild animals act would have died of old age by now, so any sighting these days must be ones due to breeding????
I believe that there are reports of a adults and a youngster being seen, even 3 together, i think its possible that they are breeding, but i would think its rare due to the small numbers, so the population never becomes to large. they are mostly sighted on unused paths and railway lines they seem to use straight travel ways to navigate around.
I have seen a deer before in Spearywell wood near Mottisfont in Hampsire that looked like either a very sick and twisted individual had repeated stabbed it and dug out most of its chest/stomach and throat or some animal had attacked and been eating it.
I am no expert on animal attack wounds either but if a large cat is going to bring a deer or stag down it will go for the throat and more than not even if the wounds are severe you will see individual puncture marks and small holes also you might find deep scratch marks on the body sometimes 4 in a row, look around the carcass for large foot prinks with deep claw marks at the tops of the toes be remember some dog prints in mud can look larger than they are because when a dog puts pressure on the mud the print is exaggerated because all the mud squishes outwards, also look for lengthy drag marks in the ground, a large cat will often kill its prey and drag it out of the open so can eat undisturbed.
I have done work for anti hunting groups who film there activities, sometimes secretly, and I have seen footage a few different cases in fact where even after the deer had been killed or trapped some of the hunters started stabbing and ripping at it in a ritualistic frenzy, and cheering on others to join in, some people are just plan sick and enjoy doing these things for nothing more than pleasure. I used to walk along rivers with my dog and would sometimes come across beautiful stags that had been shot and just dumped into shallow rivers, and often they had knife marks on them, but an animal that has been butcherd by a knife, and one thats been killed by a large cat I think would be fairly easy to distinguish between if you look close enough. Also look around for other animal hair that doesnt belong to the prey. Also they lick the meat with there tongues which strips it of in a sand paper type way, which can show signs.
All the best
Faeden