While wildlife experts are still poring over footage captured in February, claiming to be of the legendary beast, it is fair to say high-quality images of a big cat are as hard to catch as the animal itself. Freedom of Information documents have shown Parks Victoria continues to receive reports of sightings. These reports are not from people heading straight to the media for publicity. These are reports from people quietly passing on their experiences to the powers that govern our forests.
The countless fuzzy photos, animal carcasses and footprints not only stoke claims of the big cat's existence but also sharpen the criticisms of sceptics. This week the Geelong Advertiser will take a closer look at the legends and see if we can put any flesh on the bones of our very own popular urban myth. The latest sighting was by Otways resident Connie Whistance who captured some grainy vision near Binns Track on the edge of the Otway National Park
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"It was there for a good 15 to 20 minutes," Ms Whistance said. "It looked down like it was eating something and eventually it went back into the swampland."
So what are the theories?
Well, the stories about what the Otway big cat is are as varied as the numerous sightings of the animal. One popular legend my own mother used to tell me was that the big cat was a cougar that was a mascot for visiting US troops who set it free after World War II.
There are other theories for the supposed existence of big cats in forests up and down the country's eastern seaboard. One is that they escaped from circuses in the 19th century; another that they were brought in by gold miners around the same period. Now, some theorise that any over-grown feline beast could be a distant relative of the thylocoleo or marsupial lion, a fairly large and imposing carnivore who trod the Earth at the end of the pleistocene era.
Not all authorities are sceptics about big cats in Australia.
The Sydney Morning Herald reported in 2003 that it was 'more likely than not' a colony of big cats was roaming Sydney's outskirts, and Dr John Henry from Deakin University wrote more than a decade ago of the possibility of cats in the grampians.
Posted By CFZ Australia to Centre for Fortean Zoology Australia at 4/16/2010 04:04:00 PM
I thought the Australian Governmenmt actually admitted there were big cats in the Blue Hills? I think it is.
ReplyDeleteIf that is the case then this could definately be a subcolony.
I think these cats both there and in New Zealand are either remnants from WWII mascots or have been released by private owners who brought them in illegally.