Big Cat: The St. Croix Cougar
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About this ebook
J. D. Beaufeaux
Jay Denis Beaufeaux attended the University of Minnesota and St. Scholastica of Duluth in the late ’80s. His love of nature comes from being raised on the farm and he developed an interest in literature in High school. He is also, an artist. He has always felt a close kinship with cats and when he read a book called “The Wahoo Bobcat” by Joseph Lippincott in High school his interest was spiked. Since that time; images of writing a similar story has fermented in his mind and it has led him to write this book!
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Book preview
Big Cat - J. D. Beaufeaux
CHAPTER 1
AFTER THE FIRST CHASE
IT WAS A CLOUDY, COLD evening in March of 2009 when Big cat; a cougar, walked to the entrance of his lair and stretched his long, muscular body after a weary days rest. Carefully stepping out of his den his ears twitched back and forth listening to every sound as his nose checked the wind for any scent of danger. He was still feeling uneasy from the previous days adventure when baying hounds had chased him for miles and treed him after he was exhausted from running for so long.
The echoing voices of those yapping hounds in his mind and the men who came behind them made his hair stand up on the back of his neck! He recalled the fear and rage he felt as he sat trapped in the tree with the hounds barking, loudly at him; plus the men with their loud fire-sticks which made him cringe as he recalled the death of other animals he had seen killed by them. And finally, the relief he felt when the dogs were pulled back allowing him to leap to the ground and race away.
His hunger brought him back to the present as he felt his stomach groan for food. It had been over two days since he had eaten from a deer carcass; a winter kill that had been frozen and preserved. However; the dogs had driven him many miles from the carcass so he had to look for other food since he had only eaten; lightly.
Walking out of his lair into the open; he checked the area for any prey. To his right was a tamarack swamp which usually didn’t offer anything he could eat but on the left was higher ground with big oak trees and he saw a squirrel, scurry across the forest floor.
Generally, he didn’t bother with squirrels but his hunger pains drove him forward and he had to try. In a low, crouching position; he silently crept towards the squirrel but before he got close the squirrel saw him and hurried up the tree to the top. Big cat knew that it was useless to try to climb after the squirrel, since it could easily jump to branches in other trees and escape him.
As the sky darkens and the air moistens; sounds and scents are carried further than during the day. Big Cat’s keen sense of smell is a vital part of his hunting abilities and with the odors of the forest filling his nose with scents like frogs, raccoons, wild turkeys and deer; he begins to search for food. Scanning the area in the low light; he could see clearly the differences between trees, brush and prey because like all cats and some other predators; their iris’s open vertical and can expand to the full width of the eye allowing more light to enter. Thus; they can see everything more distinctly then we can in very little light.
Cougars also; have long whiskers like house cat that warning them when something is close to their face in the dark and when the wind blows across them they can sense that too! A cat’s whiskers are very important to them in low-light because with them they are able to "view’ their surroundings—so to speak—by feeling any obstacle that they may come in contact with as they search for food in dark areas.
Big Cat followed the strong, musky scents coming from a nearby pond and tried to sneak up on some croaking frogs. The marshes edge sank under his feet and he jumped back as water got his feet wet. He tried another approach to get near the frogs in the marsh but again he started to sink nto the marsh. Something moved to his right and he saw a turtle trying to paddle away but it was slowed down by the weeds as it struggled to get away. He batted with his paw at the turtle but only succeeded in splashing water as the turtle swam away.
After trying once more to catch a frog; Big Cat decided it wasn’t worth getting wet over. Turning away from the marsh; he left his mark by raising his tail high and squirting on a tree leaving his scent to mark his boundaries; then went looking for other meals.
The DNR (Department of Natural Resources) had received a number of professed sightings from residents claiming to see cougars over the years; also know as a pumas, panthers or mountain lions. Most sightings were found to be other animals; like Canadian lynx, bobcats, large dogs and a variety of other animals. However; with the more frequent use of trail cameras, spotting cougars has become much less difficult and cougars have been recorded on film.
img004-on%20peak-page%203.jpgCHAPTER 2
THE SECOND CHASE
ON THE MORNING OF THE first sighting of Big Cat; Steve Thompson, a veteran mountain lion hunter received a call from a friend that believed there were tracks of a cougar on his property. When Steve arrived; he checked out the tracks and agreed that they were mountain lion tracks… That was the beginning of the first chase. The day after letting Big Cat go from the tree; Steve was back with his dogs when the DNR requested his help in trying to collar the cat. With modern technology collaring a wild animal is the best way to keep track of the whereabouts of thee animal.
The early morning sun created ice crystals that sparkled and created rainbows of light around below him as Big Cat rested in a comfortable tree dreaming of far away places. His dreams were disturbed as the sound of distant baying hounds reached his ears. In his drowsiness; he thought it was just another bad dream but the increasing volume of the hounds brought him fully awake.
Listening closely; Big Cat could tell that they were coming his way and he knew he had to run. He quickly climbed down from the tree and bounded straight away from the threat. Running at a steady pace he noticed a field with a farm ahead of him and knowing the danger of man and the fear of being in the open in daylight; he turned towards the denser cover trees.
Quickening his pace; he loped away from the sound of the hounds and surprised a doe and fawn as he came over a hill. They raced away as Big Cat ran by ignoring them; knowing that he had to flee the dogs and couldn’t stop to hunt. Shortly after that; the scent of human’s and their leftover food dumped outside reached his nose as he passed close to a house.
He continued running away from the pursuing hounds ignoring his hunger as he lopped along. The snow had begun to melt and as he ran along the forest floor it would alternate from being snow covered to leafy soft ground.
After running for a number of miles; Big Cats fast pace was exhausting him so he slowed to a walk when he realized the hounds baying had slackened. Stopping and panting; he regained his breath and listened for the baying hounds hoping that the dogs had stopped chasing him.
Finding a pine tree with low-hanging branches, he stepped under them for shelter and he laid down to rest for a moment. He had barely caught his breath when he heard the sharp baying of the lead dog closing in on him.
Big Cat jumped to his feet and raced off in big bounds with his long tail swaying behind him giving him better balance. Various scents of the forest entered his nose as he sped along jumping over fallen trees and dodging thick brush as he continued on his way.
After