Cougar Attack
#1
Thread Starter
Matt Pendergast


Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 3,410
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From: North Bend, Washington State
Bikes: 1937 Hobbs; 1977 Bruce Gordon; 1987 Bill Holland; 1988 Schwinn Paramount (Fixed gear); 1999 Fat City Yo Eddy (MTB); 2018 Woodrup (Touring) 2016 Ritchey breakaway
Cougar Attack
Perhaps many of you know there was a cougar attack on Saturday just north of my town of North Bend. One bike rider was killed another injured.
Seattle Times Article
I was out riding when it happened and it wasn't me obviously. There's been a roll call by our local bike club but so far, no one I know was involved.
Seattle Times Article
I was out riding when it happened and it wasn't me obviously. There's been a roll call by our local bike club but so far, no one I know was involved.
#3
Occam's Rotor
Joined: Jul 2013
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#4
Senior Member
Joined: May 2011
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From: Seattle WA
Bikes: 2009 Handsome Devil, 1987 Trek 520 Cirrus, 1978 Motobecane Grand Touring, 1987 Nishiki Cresta GT, 1989 Specialized Allez Former bikes; 1986 Miyata Trail Runner, 1979 Miyata 912, 2011 VO Rando, 1999 Cannondale R800, 1986 Schwinn Passage
very Scary, I just have to worry about oblivious drivers in Seattle.
#5
Senior Member

Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 14,492
Likes: 269
From: STP
Scary.
We have a cougar that has been sighted within a half mile of the family cabin near the BWCA. I do worry when the younger visitors are out playing in the woods. It’s impossible to keep them inside and watch them, when they should be out enjoying themselves.
In addition, I mtb through this area constantly, often alone. My wife worries when I do this.
We have a cougar that has been sighted within a half mile of the family cabin near the BWCA. I do worry when the younger visitors are out playing in the woods. It’s impossible to keep them inside and watch them, when they should be out enjoying themselves.
In addition, I mtb through this area constantly, often alone. My wife worries when I do this.
#8
Partially Sane.
Joined: Jan 2016
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From: Sunny Sacramento.
Bikes: Soma Saga, pre-disc
Scary stuff, for sure. I saw a young adult cougar in Oregon, a few years ago now. They say if you see a cougar in the wild, chances are, you won't live to tell about it. I was lucky, I guess. 🤔
I'm pretty sure it comes down to what they said in that article, young adults finding their limits & territory.
I'm pretty sure it comes down to what they said in that article, young adults finding their limits & territory.
#9
SE Wis

Joined: Apr 2005
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From: Milwaukee, WI
Bikes: '68 Raleigh Sprite, '02 Raleigh C500, '84 Raleigh Gran Prix, '91 Trek 400, 2013 Novara Randonee, 1990 Trek 970
We've had one sighted most of the winter locally.
https://www.tmj4.com/news/local-news...t-porch-window
https://www.tmj4.com/news/local-news...t-porch-window
#10
Senior Member




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From: Middle Earth (aka IA)
Bikes: A bunch of old bikes and a few new ones
I saw a cougar once with 3 cubs. I was heading up some switchbacks in Big Bend National Park when I saw it coming down the path with a cub. My heart rate went up and it wasn't due to all the climbing I had been doing! I went down to the V in the switchback and got on top of a boulder. I know you are supposed to make yourself look as large as possible. I sure as heck did not want to go down the switchback and put her higher than me. I heard all this rustling and then around 15 minutes later she comes padding down the path and not 1 but 3 cubs get behind her and head down the path. She put her body between her cubs and me. Once they were safely gone, I headed up and finished the hike. What the heck that could have been bad.
#11
Senior Member


Joined: Jun 2008
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From: Vancouver, BC
Scary stuff, for sure. I saw a young adult cougar in Oregon, a few years ago now. They say if you see a cougar in the wild, chances are, you won't live to tell about it. I was lucky, I guess. 🤔
I'm pretty sure it comes down to what they said in that article, young adults finding their limits & territory.
I'm pretty sure it comes down to what they said in that article, young adults finding their limits & territory.
#12
It's MY mountain

Joined: Sep 2006
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From: Mt.Diablo
Bikes: Klein, Merckx, Trek
The standard advice to not run may not actually be the best advice.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/a...mountain-lion/
https://www.scientificamerican.com/a...mountain-lion/
Richard Coss, a psychology professor and expert on the evolution of predator–prey relationships at the University of California, Davis, studied the behavior of 185 people who were attacked by mountain lions (aka pumas or cougars) between 1890 and 2000 in the U.S. and Canada. His findings, reported in Anthrozoos: A Multidisciplinary Journal of the Interactions of People & Animals: half of the 18 people who ran when they were attacked escaped injury. The study also found, however, that those who ran had a slightly higher chance of being killed in an attack—28 percent (five) of those who fled died as a result of injuries, compared with 23 percent (eight) of those who remained motionless during big cat attacks. About 39 percent, or 28 people, who moved away slowly when approached by a mountain lion escaped without injury.
#13
Senior Member

Joined: Mar 2013
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From: Maryland
Bikes: Lots of English 3-speeds, a couple of old road bikes, 3 mountain bikes, 1 hybrid, and a couple of mash-ups
There are predators out there where we like to ride - cougars, bears, and wolves. A surprised moose can attack you as well. I worry more about humans, they are very unpredictable.
#15

DD
#16
Senior Member




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From: PDX
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And a cannon, or .357
#17
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Joined: Nov 2008
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From: Bay Area, Calif.
Seems like a gross exaggeration. Sightings in N. California aren't uncommon, but attacks are rare and far more rare are fatalities. I've only had one encounter. Was hiking with our daughter when we glanced back after a short climb. Crossing the trail we were on was an unusual looking animal and it took me a moment to realize that it was a cougar carrying a large squirrel in its mouth. It headed up toward a bush and two cubs came bounding out to practice their hunting and have some lunch. We realized that just moments before we had been directly between the mama and her cubs - I'm sure we were being watched very closely.
#18
Phyllo-buster


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From: Nova Scotia
Bikes: roadsters, club bikes, fixed and classic
#19
Banned.
Joined: Dec 2007
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I have never seen one. They exist in our western areas, I think.
Bears seem to be more common. We have bobcats here, but they are extremely shy.
Coyotes are everywhere. The night-vision video of them walking around in the Chicago 'burbs is very cool.
I must admit, after being on the road for a couple of days, the thread title had me a bit excited.
Bears seem to be more common. We have bobcats here, but they are extremely shy.
Coyotes are everywhere. The night-vision video of them walking around in the Chicago 'burbs is very cool.
I must admit, after being on the road for a couple of days, the thread title had me a bit excited.
Last edited by RobbieTunes; 05-21-18 at 06:45 AM.
#20
Senior Member

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From: northern michigan
Bikes: '77 Colnago Super, '76 Fuji The Finest, '88 Cannondale Criterium, '86 Trek 760, '87 Miyata 712
My riding partner carries a handgun when we mtb ride. We have cougars all around us. I have had wolf encounters near my yard. Oh and bears.
#21
It's MY mountain

Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 10,172
Likes: 4,229
From: Mt.Diablo
Bikes: Klein, Merckx, Trek
The man who survived said he had his entire head in the cougar's mouth, but his friend ran away and the animal chased him, officials told KOMO.
Survivor's Strava page: https://www.strava.com/athletes/203437 logged a ride on Friday, didn't upload Saturday.
#22
Perhaps many of you know there was a cougar attack on Saturday just north of my town of North Bend. One bike rider was killed another injured.
Seattle Times Article
I was out riding when it happened and it wasn't me obviously. There's been a roll call by our local bike club but so far, no one I know was involved.
Seattle Times Article
I was out riding when it happened and it wasn't me obviously. There's been a roll call by our local bike club but so far, no one I know was involved.
It's a harrowing story.
#23
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Joined: May 2012
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We have urban coyotes in Portland; actually most NW wildlife makes an appearance within city limits at least once during the year.
As far as the coyotes are concerned, I bumped into one (in Irvington! no less) while walking home from a bar crawl one night a few years ago. I noticed its silhouette wasn't that of a dog, stopped to look more intently (it was across the street; for my fellow locals, this happened at about 17th & Brazee). It noticed me, took a few steps into the light and sniffed, apparently just as curious as I was, then wandered back into the shadows. About a half a block later, I met an elderly woman who'd been out on a walk, seen the coyote, and had been watching it for several minutes. She asked me if it was indeed a coyote and (having seen any number of them when I lived in Utah) confirmed that it was.
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As far as the coyotes are concerned, I bumped into one (in Irvington! no less) while walking home from a bar crawl one night a few years ago. I noticed its silhouette wasn't that of a dog, stopped to look more intently (it was across the street; for my fellow locals, this happened at about 17th & Brazee). It noticed me, took a few steps into the light and sniffed, apparently just as curious as I was, then wandered back into the shadows. About a half a block later, I met an elderly woman who'd been out on a walk, seen the coyote, and had been watching it for several minutes. She asked me if it was indeed a coyote and (having seen any number of them when I lived in Utah) confirmed that it was.
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