
Matthew Dickie stumbled upon this mountain lion Jan. 16 on his way to work at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Caņada Flintridge. (Matthew Dickie)
Cougar sighting at JPL creates a buzz
Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, January 26, 2008.
Joe Mozingo
An engineer at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in La Caņada Flintridge was walking across a bridge to work about
8:45 a.m. Jan. 16 when he spotted something moving in the creek below. At first
he thought it was a coyote, but as he got closer he could make out the low
build, hulking forequarters and tawny fur.
![]() Matthew Dickie stumbled upon this mountain lion Jan. 16 on his way to work at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Caņada Flintridge. (Matthew Dickie) |
Mountain lion.
The
engineer, Matthew Dickie, moved to grab his camera, and the animal crouched and
froze. Other people walking to work noticed and peered over the bridge
too.
I'll be damned.
Wow.
The mountain lion
stood frozen, looking straight up at them, at most 20 feet away, unwittingly
providing a rare broad-daylight glimpse of one of Southern California's most
storied, feared and elusive animals.
Soon Dickie's photo was ricocheting
through local list-serves and websites. And residents of foothill neighborhoods
could see what they have been murmuring about for months: Mountain lions are out
and about.
On Tuesday, Crescenta Valley High School went so far as to put
out a warning in its newsletter to parents:
"For those of you who live
near the foothills of So. Cal. There have been several cougar sightings. . . .
He is very large (that's why they presume it's male). Don't hike alone in the
San Gabriel Mtns."
Wildlife biologists say the sightings are normal, but
the buzz is a perennial reminder that Southern California, after a century of
urbanization, still has a wild side.
"Most people who live in L.A. see
the mountains but don't get that it can be as alien an environment as if someone
threw you 10 miles into the Pacific Ocean," said attorney Paul R. Ayers, who
posted the photo on an online forum for area hikers.
He said reaction to
the mountain lion, also known as a cougar, has included everything from fear to
appreciation to awe.
"Wow," one woman wrote. "My children will be
fascinated. Glad I don't run on the trails."
Ayers said he didn't want to
strike fear with the photo but thought that the public should be aware simply
because the mountains around JPL are frequented by so many people -- hiking,
jogging and walking their dogs.
"The Arroyo Seco, it's like the
backyard," he said. "There are a lot of children in that area. You forget you
are on the edge of a system that isn't deterred by our thoughts of civilization.
I've seen cougars three times. You quickly realize you are not on top of the
food chain."
Mountain lion attacks against people are rare. There have
been 12 verified attacks -- three fatal -- in California since 1986, and only
three recorded in the century before that.
Wildlife experts say mountain
lions routinely venture into civilization. Most go unnoticed, but last week two
of the great cats found themselves in a camera lens like wary celebrities caught
by the paparazzi.
On Jan. 13, a mountain lion was spotted in an old pump
house at the Chatsworth Reservoir. Soon it was surrounded by gawkers snapping
photos on their cellphones.
Three days later, the mountain lion at JPL
was photographed walking into the mountains. It was 20 feet from a hiking trail,
twice as far from a sprawling parking lot and within view of the 210 Freeway.
Witnesses said that both appeared to be good-size males.
JPL employees
have been spotting mountain lions for years. The NASA laboratory is perched on
177 acres climbing the side of the San Gabriel Mountains into the open
wilderness of the Angeles National Forest.
On its east side, the Arroyo
Seco -- a stream that goes from dry to torrent depending on the weather --
courses out of the mountains onto a sandy flood basin behind the Devil's Gate
dam.
Because mountain lions and other wildlife routinely follow streams,
the Arroyo Seco is a natural corridor, funneling a 32-square-mile watershed down
to a narrow cut -- where Dickie spotted the cougar last week.
Until last
year, when the upper JPL property was fenced, large deer herds roamed the
facility's open areas.
"Whenever you have a lot of deer, you are asking
for lions," said Lt. Martin Wall of the California Department of Fish and
Game.
Two years ago, JPL employees found a partially eaten deer carcass
under a trailer.
"That was an eye-opener for them," Wall said.
JPL
spokeswoman Veronica McGregor said all sorts of animals -- bears, foxes, coyotes
-- roam onto the property.
Generally, when security officers are notified
of a mountain lion sighting, officials make an announcement over the public
address system and post an advisory on JPL's internal website.
McGregor
said this has happened three times since 2004.
Joe Edmiston, director of
the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy, said such sightings should be
celebrated.
"I think it's the most wonderful thing in the world that we
still live in a place that's not tamed, not domesticated," he said.
"We
should venerate the idea that this mountain lion is staring up at the engineers
in their pocket protectors."
Fish and Game biologists estimate that there
are 4,000 to 6,000 mountain lions in the state, from the redwoods to the Laguna
Mountains on the Mexican border. One was killed by a vehicle on Angeles Forest
Highway near Acton earlier this month.
Depending on how much food is
around, a single cat may cover a range from 20 to 200 square miles, said Kevin
Brennan, a senior wildlife biologist for the Department of Fish and
Game.
Brennan said he gets calls about mountain lions nearly every day,
although people often get them mixed up with the much smaller
bobcat.
"I've got three calls just this morning . . . in Corona, Apple
Valley, Murietta," he said.
The animals generally avoid humans -- but not
necessarily their pets.
On Jan. 3, a mountain lion snatched a dog out of
a backyard in Altadena and dragged it up into a tree, Wall said.
The
owner saw the attack and called a neighbor, an off-duty police officer who shot
the big cat out of the tree. Surprisingly, the dog survived.
In August,
mountain lions killed backyard dogs in La Crescenta and
Altadena.
Residents in the Briggs Terrace neighborhood of La Crescenta
keep one another apprised of sightings.
"It's pretty much routine to get
a voice mail or a text message that somebody sees a mountain lion, and everybody
spreads the word," said George Steele, an attorney.
Steele said he found
a dismembered raccoon in his backyard last April, just a few weeks after someone
spotted a mountain lion next to his house.
With three children, he is
vigilant, but considers the predators an inevitable aspect of living "on the
edge of the forest."
"You don't leave the kids alone in the backyard
unattended -- ever," he said. "But the dog is really the canary in the mine. I
figure it'll go for the dog and not the kids."