A puma at large
Pumas are large, cat-like animals which
are found in America. When reports
came into London Zoo that a wild puma
had been spotted forty-five miles south of
London, they were not taken seriously.
However, as the evidence began to
accumulate, experts from the Zoo felt
obliged to investigate, for the descrip-
tions given by people who claimed to
have seen the puma were extraordinarily
similar.
The hunt for the puma began in a
small village where a woman picking
blackberries saw ‘a large cat’ only five
yards away from her. It immediately ran
away when she saw it, and experts
confirmed that a puma will not attack a human being unless it is cornered. The
search proved difficult, for the puma was often observed at one place in the
morning and at another place twenty miles away in the evening. Wherever it
went, it left behind it a trail of dead deer and small animals like rabbits. Paw
prints were seen in a number of places and puma fur was found clinging to
bushes. Several people complained of ‘cat-like noises’ at night and a business-
man on a fishing trip saw the puma up a tree. The experts were now fully
convinced that the animal was a puma, but where had it come from ? As no
pumas had been reported missing from any zoo in the country, this one must
have been in the possession of a private collector and somehow managed to
escape. The hunt went on for several weeks, but the puma was not caught. It is
disturbing to think that a dangerous wild animal is still at large in the quiet
countryside.