I didn't think this story was news until I actually clicked through to the text of the article. Turns out they're talking about a large feline predator-not the other kind...

Views: 544

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Look at you, bustin' on Ayn Rand.

What kind of bike was she riding?

The North Shore may have cougar sightings, but the Western Suburbs have fox sightings on the bike path

http://chicago.craigslist.org/nwc/mis/3254307622.html

More likely a bobcat. Or somebody's golden retriever. Suburbanites panic easily.

I'd do Ayn -but only if she paid me well.  There is no free lunch for a Randian.

Given the speed at which this thread dropped off the front page on Wednesday, I certainly wasn't going to bump it, but there was a follow up in the Tribune yesterday. At least some Winnetka residents find it amusing as well:

"Laura Schoch, of Winnetka, said she is worried about the safety of the family's beloved pets — two Portuguese water dogs.

She acknowledged that news of the sighting has elicited more than a few laughs among her friends, given that the word is also used to describe an older woman looking for romance with a younger man.

"Of course, everyone is chuckling when you say there are cougars in Winnetka," Schoch said. "We've always known that!"

It's good that at least a few folks there have a sense of humor about it.

Kevin C said:

Given the speed at which this thread dropped off the front page on Wednesday, I certainly wasn't going to bump it, but there was a follow up in the Tribune yesterday. At least some Winnetka residents find it amusing as well:

"Laura Schoch, of Winnetka, said she is worried about the safety of the family's beloved pets — two Portuguese water dogs.

She acknowledged that news of the sighting has elicited more than a few laughs among her friends, given that the word is also used to describe an older woman looking for romance with a younger man.

"Of course, everyone is chuckling when you say there are cougars in Winnetka," Schoch said. "We've always known that!"

I've seen a Coyote on the Channel Trail near Foster.   Crazy thing ran across the park towards the channel right in front of me.   It startled me a little bit to see one in the city.  I've seen much wildlife out on that trail -including deer.  

The one I saw looked just like "Big Momma" in that article although she looked a lot bigger now and the tail was much more uniformly black and puffy in contrast to the rest of her golden fur.  If not her than one of her daughters/cousins maybe.

She was hauling ass when she crossed me -faster than most any dog I've ever seen and totally silent -no clompity-clompity that most dogs make when running flat out.    And she was running flat out -I don't think  she realized how fast I was coming or head me at first.  She probably thought she could cross well before I got there but I was riding pretty fast (nobody was on the path that early) with very little wind and she was running down-wind so I'm sure she never smelled me or heard my almost-silent bike until too late so she just burned across my path to get by and away before I got there at full on speed.  When she crossed me I think she was only about 30 feet in front of my front tire and I was still going about 18-ish after slowing down a little after seeing her.  

I used to do dog rescue when I lived in WI and saw my share of different dogs come through my kennel.   I even had a Coydog (actually it was a Dogote) that I took care of for 2 years or so.  That dog could jump onto the kitchen counter  like a cat from just the standing position and if you weren't looking you wouldn't even hear her jump or land -totally silent.  THAT behavior was tough to train out...  She was faster than my fastest dog who wasn't a slouch either -turned faster and could accelerate faster too.  Used to sleep on top of a doghouse just like Snoopy.   My dog would copy this behavior until the day he died as he was quite fond of her.

We eventually placed her with a family that didn't follow ANY of the instructions we gave them and ended up letting her run free on their property so she got very aggressive, territorial, and wild -eventually attacking a visitor and doing extensive damage to the poor guy.  Hundreds of stitches..

When I got her back after that I wasn't able to train the extreme aggressiveness out  of her and she wouldn't respect or let anyone near her except for me and, to a lesser extent, my wife if i was present. Anyone else and she was all hackles and gnashing fangs.  I eventually had to put her down as she was a danger to everyone although she got along fine with most of the dogs I had on site as long as they were submissive around her.   Poor thing :( It literally broke my heart to have to do that.  I had nursed her through heartworm as a pup, all for heartache later because some jerks wouldn't listen to SIMPLE instructions that we made very clear to them.

I hope I get to see more Coyotes on the trail someday -they are beautiful creatures.  I'll pass on the cougars though, unless they are wearing spandex...



Cameron Puetz said:

Chicago has a fairly large coyote population

http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2010/12/08/131876027/60-wild-coyo...

James BlackHeron said:

I've seen a Coyote on the Channel Trail near Foster.   Crazy thing ran across the park towards the channel right in front of me.   It startled me a little bit to see one in the city.  I've seen much wildlife out on that trail -including deer.  

RSS

© 2008-2016   The Chainlink Community, L.L.C.   Powered by

Disclaimer  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service