I have had a couple of sightings of such cats which might illustrate the problems with these sightings..
We had a spate of sighting near us which were reported in the local paper ect
Just after that, I was driving over to a friends one evening in the area concerned and was 100% convinced I saw the cat run across the lane just a head of me. I quickly pulled my vehicle into a gateway where the cat had gone and looked down the field using some binos
Although it was just getting dusk, the binos meant I had a very clear view and what looked like a very dark and very large cat, walking directly away from me at about 70 yards
From the rear, it shape and gait looked very cat like indeed
to say I was amazed and excited was an understatement
As it was rapidly approaching a hedge and would go out of sight shortly, I gave it a few rabbit squeaks to see if I could get its attention. On about the third one it paused and looked back at me giving me a clear view of its head
It was a dog! Some sort of lurcher I would guess, with one white sock on a front paw
It was probably a stray that was in the area perhaps lost by poachers and I am convinced that it was this animal that was responsible for the rash of sightings that had been reported
In deed, if the animal had not paused and looked back I would have been quite convinced myself
Another time, several months before the first incident, I was out lamping foxes for a farmer friend
something had been killing lambs and then sheep in the area and talk of a big cat started circulating.
Anyway, its a pitch black night and I was in the middle of the back of beyond in an empty field calling away when I picked up a pair of eyes in my spot light in some bracken on a bank over looking me
they were about 400 yards away
As I called, this thing responded and came in
I couldnt see the body in the beam, just the eyes periodically as it peeped out of the bracken at me
In a minute or two it was apparent this was no fox as the eyes were just too wide spread,
it was also clear that it was simply too big, as the eyes were near the tops of the bracken which put them about 3 or 4 feet tall!
At this point, I started getting concerned and stopped calling
The animal was still about 200 yards away at this point, but still it came in
it didnt run in directly, but ran in short bursts zig zagging down the hill, pausing now and again in the bracken to watch me
I went through all the list of likely suspects it could be from sheep, to horses, to cows, but its behavious and size didnt fit in with any of them
At this point I could actually hear it crashing through the bracken as it got closer
.Thoughts of some sort of stray dog crossed my mind, but it simiply sounded too heavy as it approached.
I was about 40 yards away from the edge of the bracken, and there was a stock fence between me and it as well.
At this point I had decided that if what ever "it" was, cleared the stock fence infront of me, it was going to get a .223Rem round for its troubles as by this stage I had gone from concerned to worried , with my rather over active imagination not helping!
Finally, the beast cleared the edge of the bracken and stood in the clear just the other side of the stock fence where I could see it in the beam of my spot lamp
It turns out "it" was a bl**dy dark Shetland pony the farmer had forgotten to tell me about!
It jus goes to show how important it is for people out lamping to positively identify their targets and not just shoot at eyes they see in the beam!!
Incidently, the lamb and sheep killers were later found to be a couple of pet Westhighland White terriors that were going AWOL from a nearby cottage overnight...It seems the owners knew something was wrong as the dogs were turning up covered in blood ect, but had refused to accept what they were doing until they were witnessed in the act. How such a small terrier could kill a full grown sheep is beyond me, but I guess if the ewes had been weak from lambing, it was possible.
Regards,
Pete