OUR VIEW: Cougars are on the prowl all around us

We need to be cougar-aware when we're out enjoying Mother Nature

We’re lucky, in Campbell River, that the wilderness is our backyard, our front yard, and all around us.

We like most of the wildlife we encounter in the woods, but cougars haven’t necessarily been good neighbours lately.

Twice this summer teenage boys have reported being chased and stalked by cougars – one along the ERT road and a second incident along the bike bath that runs behind the Sportsplex.

There have been a number of cougar sightings around the city this year, but whether the big cats are noticed or not, they’re there.

Conservation officers say Vancouver Island has a “high-density” cougar population.

Anecdotally, at least, encounters with the cats seem to be on the rise. It’s caused some people to rethink their outdoor recreation, but we shouldn’t be so much scared, as aware.

It’s worthwhile knowing conventional cougar wisdom. If we see one creeping up, we should draw ourselves up to our full height, throw rocks and sticks and give it a thorough scolding. If a fierce feline attacks, we should fight back with indiscriminate violence. As for our pooches, unfortunately they can look like prey to a carnivorous cat and we’re best to let them fend for themselves. In the backwoods there are a lot of beasts and sometimes they might trespass on our trails, but they have as much right to be there as we do.

We’re bound to come across them now and then and really, there’s only a remote risk of any of those encounters deteriorating into a bad day.

The great outdoors is our city’s best attribute and we can continue to enjoy it to its fullest as long as we’re cougar smart rather than cougar scared.

-Black Press

Campbell River Mirror