Bear Grease - Ep. 1: The Myth of the Southern Mountain Lion

Episode Date: April 7, 2021

There are two types of people in the South -- those who have seen mountain lions and those who haven’t. Supposedly extirpated from the South, the native species has lived on through backwoods lore a...nd many believe they never left. Did they? Clay Newcomb explores the touchy topic by interviewing biologists, investigating two eye-witness sightings, and talking with a psychologist about people seeing things that aren’t real. This is a lesson in biology and human nature, and a great story that gets to the truth about mountain lions in the South.Connect with Clay and MeatEaterClay on InstagramMeatEater on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and YoutubeShop Bear Grease Merch Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an I-Heart podcast. Guaranteed Human. First Lights fieldware collection is made for the work that happens long before opening day and continues when the season ends. Products built for early mornings, full days and real use. Hard wearing where they need to be versatile where it matters. No shortcuts. Just gear designed for the work that earns the season.
Starting point is 00:00:26 Built to perform, built to last. Check out. First Light's new field. Worldware gear at firstlight.com. My name is Clay Newcomb, and I'm a seventh generation, Arkansas. I'm a husband, a father, a hunter, a mule skinner, a writer. I'm an entrepreneur. I'm a person of faith.
Starting point is 00:00:47 We're starting a new podcast here, a meat eater, and I hope you'll follow along. I'm interested in that intersection of where tradition and contemporary life meet. On this podcast, we're going to look back into here. history and find relevance for today. I like looking for insight in unlikely places, searching for relevance and things that have been forgotten. And I love telling the story of Americans who live their life close to the land. This podcast is going to be an efficient listen with an engaging glance into history and an
Starting point is 00:01:24 interesting guest where we'll explore unique people, unique topics, and unique stories. I hope that you'll follow along on the Bear Grease podcast. There it is. That's the name of our new podcast, the Bear Grease podcast. Why the name Bear Grease? If you know much about me, you know that I love some bear grease, which is the rendered fat of a bear, literally the cooked lard of a bear that's turned into oil.
Starting point is 00:01:56 At one time, bear grease or bear oil was a highly very very very very very, valued commodity, and it was used for cooking and all other sorts of practical stuff. It was even used as currency. It had a ton of value. And today, most people wouldn't know anything about it. Technology and modern times have buried some pretty cool stuff that we're rediscovering, and we're redefining now, even what's relevant by looking back. Some of the things that time has forgotten are ripe for a cultural,
Starting point is 00:02:29 resurrection. Bear Greece is a metaphor, and as you follow along, I think you'll begin to understand what I mean. How certain are you that you saw two mountain lions? 100% no doubt. Have you ever seen a lion, mountain lion in Arkansas? No. I think there's Panther. I think there's black mountain lions myself. On this episode of the Bear Grease podcast will be exploring the myth of the Southern Mountain Lion and how the lore or maybe the hard science, we don't know which one, has forever and inextricably connected itself to Southern culture. We're going to talk to some mountain lion believers, a biologist, and even a psychologist, to get some answers about lions and about human nature.
Starting point is 00:03:31 Well, I mean, I don't have any proof of it. I just always have heard that. You've heard, it's like you've heard of cognitive. I mean, I've just believed the propaganda. My name is Clay Newcomb, and this is the Bear Greece podcast, where we'll explore things forgotten but relevant. Search for insight in unlikely places, and where we'll tell the story of Americans who live their lives close to the land.
Starting point is 00:04:12 There are two kinds of people in the South, those that have seen mountain lions and those that haven't. Both of these groups carry their own unique stigmas, perhaps both equally as wrought with irony as the other. They seem to huddle tightly in cult-like clans of believers and unbelievers. But to understand the tension between those who've seen mountain lions and those who haven't, and yes, there is tension, you'll have to understand a bit of history. The mountain lion, Puma Concolor, is a large tan-colored feline weighing up to 200 pounds or more. It, along with the Jaguar, which are extremely rare and primarily live south of the U.S. border in Mexico,
Starting point is 00:05:02 are the only large cats in North America since the extinction of the giant cats of the Pleistocene, which basically was an epic of time that ended about 10,000 years ago. These Pleistocene cats included Sabretooth, cats, American lions, American jaguars, the American cheetah. This place used to be crawling with giant purring predators. However, today we've pretty much got one large cat in the United States in Canada. The old mountain lion, or Puma or Panther, or the painter, or the catamount, all the same animal, but they have different names and different regions. You might recognize one of these. But the mountain line's native range extends from the Canadian Yukon all the way down to
Starting point is 00:05:52 the Andes Mountains of South America. And from the east and west, its range goes from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. This is fascinating. They are the most widespread terrestrial mammal in the Western Hemisphere. To bring it home simply to North America, prior to European settlement, they had the widest geographic spread of any large mammal, more than white-tailed deer, more than elk, more than buffalo, more than anything. And herein lies our issue in 2021. They used to be here, but by the turn of the 20th century, mountain lines were extirpated from almost 100% of their eastern range in the entire eastern deciduous forest. The word extirpated means, that they didn't go extinct, but they were removed from a specific region.
Starting point is 00:06:49 The eastern deciduous forest basically extends from East Texas all the way to Maine and from Wisconsin all the way down to Florida. Basically, it's the eastern one-third of the United States. It's worth noting that mountain lions in southern Florida held on and were never entirely gone, perhaps making them the only mountain lions east of the Mississippi for a very long time. time? Or were they? Have they been in much of the eastern deciduous forest all this time, just right under our noses? A lot of people think so. But for sure, throughout the 20th century, mountain line populations only survived, according to science anyway, in the rugged, mountainous regions
Starting point is 00:07:34 of the western U.S. and Canada. Though lions haven't been in the south for the last hundred years, or at least that's what the government biologists tell us. Lots of people still see them. In fact, I know some of these hillbillies that aren't afraid to stand up against the statistics and against the science and boldly proclaim their eyewitness convictions. Some might even call it conservation slander. The myth of the Southern Mountain Line is so strongly embedded into our culture they might as well actually be here. Or maybe they are here. Maybe they've been here all along.
Starting point is 00:08:15 The only way that I know how to get to the bottom of this is to hear some of these stories for myself. And some of these stories are pretty close to home. Just for the record, I've never seen a mountain line in the South, but my dear sweet dad, Gary Newcomb, has. And here's his story. When was it? Tell me when it was.
Starting point is 00:08:41 Oh, I would say 20 years ago. 15, 20 years ago. I was going to say late 90s. Well, yeah, probably, probably. And I was in one of my favorite hunting areas driving on a warehouser road. But then I looked to my left, and when I turned my truck in the middle of the road to make that turn, I looked up there. And there was what I thought was a bobcat. I thought that's a big old bobcat.
Starting point is 00:09:10 Is it, it's daytime? Yeah, yeah, it's later in the afternoon, but still real clear light. I mean, it wasn't like dusty or anything. And I thought, big bobcat. And then I saw the tail. And I go, holy cow, that's the mountain line. And, you know, it was 100 yards. You know, it was pretty good ways off.
Starting point is 00:09:31 Now you saw a distinctive tail. Distinctive, no question about it. So what color was? I want to say blue. Yeah. It was just a tan-colored animal. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:45 I mean, like, okay, so you're my dad, and I inherently trust your judgment. You've been around 72 years. Yeah. How certain are you? If there was a way to tell, I mean, like, if there was really a way to know whether it was a mountain line or not, and your life depended on, how certain are you that you saw a mountain line? It was a mountain line. It would be a mountain. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:08 I mean, I don't know what has a tail that was, it's like. as long as the body, it seemed to me like. What did it do? Was it standing in the road and ran on it? It took his time, came across the road. By the time I saw it was pretty close to the ditch. And if I remember correctly, it looked at me. So it didn't just dart across the road?
Starting point is 00:10:26 No, no, no. It was moving slow. So you got a good look at it. Yeah. And so, but I didn't catch it from over here to here. I caught it towards the, you know, just maybe two or three steps from the ditch. and then it just eased off in the ditch and then went into the cutover, you know, 10-year-old cut.
Starting point is 00:10:46 And when I saw the tail, you know, I said, I was just thinking mountain line, you know. I mean, it's just, I mean, what has a tail? Yeah. Brent Reeves would be considered a hillbilly if he didn't live in the Arkansas Delta or the swamp country. Regardless of semantics, he's a close friend of mine,
Starting point is 00:11:11 a veteran outdoorsman. and he's been in law enforcement for the last 30 years. I've only known him to stretch the truth on occasion, and he claims to not just have seen one mountain lion, but two, I'll let you judge his story. So Brent, tell me about not one mountain line, but two mountain lines that you've seen in Arkansas. I will gladly relate the following.
Starting point is 00:11:38 The first one was probably in 19, I mean, going to say it was an 88. Me and three other guys were working for a private timber management company. And we were in Ashley County, Arkansas, which is right next. There's two counties away from Mississippi and southeast Arkansas. We were driving down a timber company road going to manage some timbers probably 9 o'clock in the morning, good daylight. And a Panther, Mountline, Cougar, whatever you want to call it, jumped out in front of our truck
Starting point is 00:12:10 at about 30 yards and loped down the road in front of us for 20, 30 seconds, and we're right behind it. And it ran off into a section of timber that we drove down another quarter of a mile and went in ourselves to cruise the timber to see how much timber was in there. That was the first one I'd ever seen. And we got back that afternoon. There was no cell phones or anything back during that time. So when we got back to the office that afternoon, I called a.
Starting point is 00:12:40 a friend, and we then reported to the game of fish, and we got a call back, I think, the next day that they had had reports of that in the area and actually attributed it to one that had escaped captivity. And so it was known in that area to be rambling around. And so that wasn't the only mountain line you've seen. You've seen another one. How'd that go down? my friend David Boudra and I were going to coon hunting one evening. Now this would have been... Is that even a real name?
Starting point is 00:13:14 It is. It is. It is. It is getting fishier and fishier. It is. It is a real name. He can attest to it. But David and I were going coon hunting one evening in Cleveland County, where I grew up.
Starting point is 00:13:27 And it's dusky dark. You don't have to drive with your lights on. And we were driving next to this big clear cut, a fresh clear cut. and there was two or three big trees that weren't merchantable for logs or anything. So the timber company left them out there. And this tree was probably, it was a big white oak tree. It was probably 150, 200 yards away from the timber access road. And we're driving down through there.
Starting point is 00:13:53 It's in the fall of the years. So the leaves are coming off pretty good. And I look out there and I can see a silhouette of what I thought was a turkey. And I told David, I said, David, look that big old turkey sitting on a limb out there. and he said, yeah, I see it. Well, I had my coon hunting light on. I just turned my light on, see if I could see if it was a gobbler or a hen. And when I turned it on, the eyes were glowing back at me, which turkey's eyes don't normally do that.
Starting point is 00:14:19 And we slowed down and David said, man, that's not a, that's not a turkey. And we slowed down to look at it and it turned, started walking down that limb, and you could plainly see that big long tail out from out behind it. That thing walked down towards the tree. of the tree, got to where the limb leaves the trunk of the tree, put his feet down there, pause, and just dropped down into that clear cut. And then we turned around and went back the other direction and turned our dogs loose. Let me ask you this on both of these sightings. Now, 30 years later, if your life depended on it and there was a way to know the absolute truth,
Starting point is 00:14:59 and they said, they're going to burn your house down if you're wrong, how certain are you that you saw two mountain lions. 100% no doubt. And the thing about it is both times I had a witness with me. Of course, one of them was a Coon Hunter. I'm going to need their phone numbers. One of them is a Coon Hunter. And they, you know, he's not vaccinated against Lyon, but I'm telling you, no doubt about it.
Starting point is 00:15:32 I'll let you be the judge of whether you believe these two stories or not. but I've got somebody that has the credentials to validate them or take away all their credibility. I'm not sure which one it'll be. Myron Means is the statewide large carnivore program coordinator for the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission. If there's an expert on mountain lions around these parts, it's Myron Means. I think he can give us some insight into the facts of whether the mythical mountain lions or the South are real or if they're just a farcical relic of folklore passed on from a time when they were actually here. Myron, when I first met you 10, 11 years ago, you were the Arkansas bear coordinator.
Starting point is 00:16:20 Black bear biologist, that's right. And now you're not. Your title has changed. What's your new title with the Arkansas Game of Fish Commission? My new title is statewide large carnivore program coordinator for Arkansas Game and Fish Commission. Okay. That's a mouthful. So something happened because at one time there was just one large carnivore acknowledged by the gaming fish.
Starting point is 00:16:47 That's right. And your title change, which indicates what happened? Well, long about 10 years ago, right after I took the bear program coordinator position, we started seeing mountlines in the state. And it's not that they weren't seen prior to that. It's just that, you know, we didn't have, there were very, very few ways to document a sighting. I mean, you know, if you think back historically, people didn't have gang cameras back much in the 80s, you know. And that's kind of come along in the past 15 years or so. But anyway, what, basically what happened was mountain lines started showing up in the state from time to time.
Starting point is 00:17:30 And Game and Fish recognized that, you know, you need to have. someone that's kind of coordinating the sightings, coordinating the verifications, and just kind of packaging the mountain line stuff. So it's not necessarily that now there are lines here and there weren't before, but we just know about them. Is that what I'm hearing you say? That's right. That's right.
Starting point is 00:17:54 You know, for a lot of years. Primarily because of game cameras. Primarily because of game cameras. Or, you know, if someone has one like on a phone video or something like that, But it's primarily been the game cameras. That's really what has helped us, you know, document the occurrence of mountain lines in the state. So here's the question. Where did they come from?
Starting point is 00:18:15 Because bears mountain lines, this would be historic mountain line range here in Arkansas. Absolutely. And in all of the eastern United States. So where did our lines come from? Well, that's a million dollar question. Who knows? The only evidence that we have currently was from a mountain line that was shot by a deer hunter back into 2016 now. That was harvested or shot in Bradley County by a deer hunter.
Starting point is 00:18:45 That mountain line was also previously documented on a cache in Marion County about two months prior to that. So that would have been in, that was in 2014. I'm sorry. So the DNA evidence that we collected from that cat in both instances told us that number one, it's the same cat, told us that number two, that cat had origins from the South Dakota population. Now, that doesn't necessarily mean that cat was born in South Dakota. It just means that its DNA origins came from that South Dakota population. Now, if you think of it in terms of where would it most likely come from? Well, there's established mountain line populations in the Dakotas, South Dakota.
Starting point is 00:19:38 Which would be north and west of us slightly, primarily north, but still in the Mississippi River drainage for the most part? Well, it'd be kind of, it'd be probably closer tied to the Missouri River drainage. Gotcha. There's an established population in northwest Nebraska. there's an established population out in the panhandle of Oklahoma. There's an established population of lines in the panhandle of Texas and in southern Texas. So, I mean, and of course you have the Florida Panthers in Florida. So those are really the closest, quote, established population.
Starting point is 00:20:17 That would be 500 miles from here? You know, the closest population would probably be the panhandle of Oklahoma, you know, out in the Black Hills area. but is it likely that those cats would move all the way across Oklahoma? Probably not because the travel corridors and the habitat just isn't there. Is it likely that a cat could move out of the Dakotas across northern Nebraska into eastern Nebraska and hit the Missouri River drainage and follow the Missouri River down through the Ozarks of Missouri and then into the Ozarks of Arkansas and then go who knows where else, that's probably the most likely.
Starting point is 00:20:58 So it's almost like highways, like habitat highways. It is. You could track good lion habitat all the way back to the Dakotas and Nebraska. Sure, you could. I mean, you know, there's going to be some spances of maybe 100, 150 mile, maybe even 200-mile gaps. But you have to think in travel terms, you know, that's something that a mountain line could do in a day or two. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:25 Myron, what about captive lions getting out? Because I remember growing up in western Arkansas, you'd hear the odd person say they saw a lion and it was always thrown back up on captive. They said somebody had a captive lion and they let it loose. What do you think of that? Yeah. And matter of fact, you know, that was really kind of the official, I guess, position of the agency through the 80s and 90s that more than likely, if someone saw a mountain line more than
Starting point is 00:21:53 likely it was the result of an escaped cat or a cat that someone couldn't care for anymore. They were moving. Maybe the owner died. Maybe something. And so what are they going to do? Just turn it out. So that was really kind of the official position of the agency for a couple of decades. That more and likely, if you saw a cat, it was probably a released cat or an escaped cat.
Starting point is 00:22:18 You know, that takes all the fun out of seeing the mountain line. Well, it certainly presented a lot of guys. of opportunities, you know, for the agency for a long time. Back in the early 2000s is probably when the agency started turning around saying, well, more than likely rather than being an escape cat, because a lot of those captive breeders kind of fell out. You know, when I was a kid growing up. Regulations got more difficult to keep in town.
Starting point is 00:22:44 It just wasn't the thing. I mean, I could remember, believe it or not, when I was a kid, I knew two people that I went to a grade school with. that had pet mountain lines. I mean, you know, so. Right in Western Arkansas. So, I mean, back in the 70s, you know, it wasn't that odd of a deal for someone to have a mountain line as a pet.
Starting point is 00:23:04 You know, we still have no proof. A lot of people try to play gotcha all the time with us and say, well, gaming fish says that, you know, we don't have mountain lines. Well, you know, we've never said we don't have mountain lines. What we've said for the past 40 years or plus years is that we don't have any evidence. of an established reproducing population of mountain lines. And has that changed? No.
Starting point is 00:23:29 Still has not changed. We still don't have evidence of a breeding population of mountain lines here. We do not. Well, let me ask you this. Do you feel like today in Arkansas, there are mountain lines that are living here year-round? I think there are mountain lines that live here year-round. I think virtually all of the mountain lines that we have documented sightings of over the past, well since 2010, I felt like they're all males.
Starting point is 00:23:56 You know, either young males or older males, a lot of the picture evidence translates to them being older males. I'm not talking really old males, but mature males. And that would be very characteristic of an expanding population of large carnivores, whether it be bears or lions. You would start to see these fringe areas that would start to get satellite males. Mm-hmm. Yeah. And, you know, a lot of people don't realize with mountain lines is that, you know, you're talking about a young animal that gets pushed out of a population, a young male, that basically gets kicked out on the streets. You know, it's not something that they're just going to travel another 50 miles down the road and establish, you know, a territory of their own. I mean, you're talking about animals that have no qualms about traveling hundreds of miles in order to, you know,
Starting point is 00:24:50 find a suitable territory that has food, cover, and females. Well, in the absence of females, they're not going to establish a territory. I mean, it's just that simple. So when you think of the behavior that takes place in these animals, they move in to, say, if they did come from the Dakotas, they move into the Missouri, they go down the Missouri drainage, they're starting to mature, they're no longer six months old, they're a year-old, mature male. So there are a couple of things that are driving that young mountain line to exist.
Starting point is 00:25:29 One of them is food and the other one is reproduction. And until he finds both of those, he's not going to set up shop anywhere. So he's looping down into Missouri and going back probably. He might be going back. He might just continue to keep going until he does find a female. And whether that means he has to cross. four or five, six states to do it, they'll do it. Wow.
Starting point is 00:25:54 In the 1990s movie, Dumb and Dumber, Jim Carrey, when he's confronted with the fact that his girlfriend is leaving him forever, and she gives him an inkling of hope that perhaps she'll come back to him, he says, So you're telling me there's a chance. I feel like what Myron just said in talking about the dispersal of mountain lions and their ability to travel such long distances give some credibility to the lore of the southern mountain lion
Starting point is 00:26:26 because we have an established population of lions in southern Florida and then in the west, and it would not be unheard of for lions to travel that distance. So maybe there is something to all these mountain lion sightings. Regardless to the fact that many of these sightings could have and very well may have been captive lions released that people were seen. On Blood Trails, the stories don't end when the hunt is over. They just get darker. I've seen something in the road. I instantly thought it was a sleeping bag and there was a pool of blood.
Starting point is 00:27:11 Oh my God, he doesn't have a hit. Blood Trails is a true crime podcast born in the outdoors, where the terrain is unforgiving, the evidence is scarce, and the truth. Truth gets buried under brush and silence. Indications were he should be right there, but he wasn't. This season, we're going deeper. From cold case files to whispered suspicions, from remote mountains to frozen backwards. Each story begins in the wilderness and ends in darkness. Because out here, there are no witnesses, no cameras, just fragments and the people left behind trying to piece them back together.
Starting point is 00:27:51 He's not an honest person. He's incapable of being honest. Somebody somewhere knows something. I'm Jordan Sillers. Season 2 of Blood Trails premieres April 16th. Follow now on Apple, IHeart, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. So do you foresee a time? So with the habitat structure that we currently have between here and these populations, do you forecast a time? It might be 20 years.
Starting point is 00:28:24 from now, 50 years from now, five years from now, I don't know, will we have an established breeding population? Because what would typically happen, as I understand, dispersal of these large carnivores, is like, the males start making these satellite loops, and then at some point, females. You know, like at some point, we're going to get a picture of a female in Arkansas. Well, you know, Missouri came up about four, I believe it was about four years ago, and they collected some hair off of a confirmed sighting. They confirmed that it was a female. The experts that I have talked to about mountain lions, all of them have been pretty consistent
Starting point is 00:29:04 in saying that if you do have a female in a geographic area, a male will finder. It's just a matter of time. When you do have a female show up, you will have a breeding population. What I want to kind of talk to you about now is like, Mountain Lion, folklore essentially in places where there historically haven't been lions in the last hundred years. So in Arkansas, we have Ozarks and Washhtaws, which would have these big, vast sections of public land that would be, for all of our deer populations would be less dense populations
Starting point is 00:29:40 of deer than on private land. There's less deer in the mountains than there are in these agriculture areas and civilizers. Well, it seems to me that there is an unorthodox shift. in mountain lion folklore in these like backwoods places and I'm like where there's not enough deer there like there's there's not enough game for these animals to be living like I think people would have this idea that a mountain lion if he was living here he'd be living way out and you know XX mountain which is far back in there but what we're seeing with these lion sightings that you guys are confirming is that they're not necessarily in the backwoods they're in places with
Starting point is 00:30:19 higher deer density is that true I think that would be the natural place to set up a territory. Yeah. Exactly along the lines of what you're speaking of. I'll give you an example. Custer, South Dakota is a very, very small mountain town. And if you look, a lot of the mountain towns up in the Black Hills, you know, they're very small communities in the lower portions of these valleys with the road highways running through them. And when you drive through them, you can see the edge of town. You know, up on the side of the mountain over there, you can see it to the left and right. When we were driving through there, one of the houndsmen that I was spent some time with, he'd be like, oh, yeah, you know, Mountain Line took a Labrador from that guy's house right over there,
Starting point is 00:31:01 and we'd go down the road, and, well, that guy had his truck parked up at this, you know, this bar or whatever it was sitting on the edge of town that you could see up there, but it's on the edge of town. Well, he came down and drug a deer out of that guy's truck, you know, and he's telling me all these stories, and, you know, mountain lines just don't have that secret to them that I really thought they did. I mean, I thought they would stay, you know, a hundred miles away from a civilization or whatever. And really, they're not.
Starting point is 00:31:33 It kind of cues back into what you were saying. They're going to go and they're going to set up shop where food is available, where it's the easiest and where there's the most of it. It might be more natural for a mountain line to set up an area that they're going to stay in a territory in the heart. heart of the Ozark National Forest or would it be more likely that he set up in a territory on the fringes of National Forest? Probably more likely to set up a territory on the fringes of national forests. But you're still talking about an animal even in prime mountain line habitat.
Starting point is 00:32:08 You're talking about an animal that has home ranges of, you know, 100 plus square miles. So let's talk about where lions have been seen in Arkansas and how you guys determine that one is a siting is valid. Describe that to me. We get probably 150 plus sightings that people contact us a year. Now, of those sightings that we're able to have physical evidence of whether it be a track, whether it be a game camera photo, whether it be a phone photo or video, whatever else, something that we have physical evidence that we can go out. We take a field investigation form. We go out on any sighting that has physical evidence and we'll record it. If it's a game camera photo, we're going to record where the picture was, you know, whether it was yes,
Starting point is 00:32:59 verify that it was taken from this camera at this spot. You have background. Yeah. You're doing everything. Yeah, you're doing an investigation to verify that, A, you know, it was a mountain line. B, it was taken at this location because there's a lot of internet hoaxes going out there, you know. This mountain line was taken at a friend of mine's, friends, uncles, you know, best cousins, whatever camera last week.
Starting point is 00:33:26 Comes out that's been floating around the internet for six years, and it was, you know. I was going to say that if the gaming fish gets 150 sightings per year, I know about 50 of those guys, and I can tell you, they're full of it. But it boils right down to it for the last decade or so, the amount of sightings that we have been able to. to verify and hold on to your seat, the amount of sightings that we have been able to verify per year averages to about one.
Starting point is 00:33:58 Wow. One to two sightings per year that we're able to verify. Wow. And say yes, that's without a doubt a mountain line. What is your personal feeling on all these other sightings? And just because someone can't verify a sighting doesn't mean that it's not legit. It just means that they didn't have a... Well, it just means that us.
Starting point is 00:34:18 as a conservation agency or a scientific agency. I mean, you know, we can't, I can't go out there and say, well, we've got 100 mountain lines in the state because we've had this many sightings. I mean, I can't. You've got to have evidence. I got to have evidence of it. I got to have proof of it. I mean, you know, we don't just go out there on a whim and say we've got this many bear or this many deer.
Starting point is 00:34:41 So what's your gut about all these other sightings? Are people wrong or are people right? and it's just not verifiable. I think about 98% of the sightings that we get are misidentification. What do they see in? You'd be surprised at the amount of video or picture sightings that are sent to me every year. And I'm not talking about three or four. I'm talking about tens, 50, 60, you know, maybe more.
Starting point is 00:35:12 Pictures or videos that are sent to me every year that are house cats. House cats? You mean to tell me that people are mistaking house cats for mountain lions? A 15-pound cat versus 150-pound cat? Believe it. Farrell house cats are estimated to number 70 million, maybe even more. They're everywhere. And people don't understand scale often when they see an animal.
Starting point is 00:35:43 Get a picture of it. The biggest misidentification is by far and away domestic housecats or just feral housecats, housecats in general. I do have a lot of bobcat pictures that are sent to me, even videos of bobcats. And, you know, there's some anatomical features that bobcats possess that housecats or mountlines don't possess. One of them, of course, is the obvious, the bob tail. But I've seen a lot of pictures where a hind foot actually looks like a continuation of a tail. and then you look up at the head of it and you see these big huge white dots on the backs of the ears, which are specific to bobcats, not mountain lines.
Starting point is 00:36:26 Mountain lines don't have white patches on the backs of the ears. Okay, here's the question of the hour. Okay. I've found living in the south, living in Arkansas, there's two kinds of people. There's people that have seen mountain lines, and there are people that have not. So, Myron Means, taking out of his position, at the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission. Have you ever seen the lion, mountain lion in Arkansas?
Starting point is 00:36:50 No. I have not. Good. Thank goodness, Myron. I wish I had. But, you know, I mean, you know, I tell people this all the time, the amount of people that have seen mountain lions and everything else. I mean, if you think about that, it's a lot of people.
Starting point is 00:37:06 A lot of people claim to have seen them. And I'm not here to tell anybody that they didn't see what they thought they saw. We're up to like since 2010, we're up to 19 verified sightings. 19 verified sightings in the last 10 years in Arkansas. Yeah. To understand why people so badly want to believe in mountain lines, we're going to have to understand a bit about human nature. Dr. Richard Back has been a clinical psychologist since 1979,
Starting point is 00:37:40 and he has some unique insight into why humans act the way they do. Dr. Back. of the hundreds, if not thousands of mountain line sightings that people would have claimed over the years to have happened here in Arkansas. And the actual number of verified sightings being so small, why do people, why do people believe that they've seen a lion? When statistically, they probably actually didn't. Well, there's probably two things going on there.
Starting point is 00:38:16 One is that it's kind of an exciting thing to think is possible. And if people have any sort of belief established already, whether they've read articles on mountain lines or they had an uncle or grandfather talked about the mountain lines, if there's some connection somewhere and the person probably can't even identify where it was. But if it's an established fact that there are mountain lines, then when they see something that can be fit into that perception, they'll tend to do it. And then you can't talk them out of it no matter what you show them. And they are really confirming what they already believe or picked up somewhere. Is there a psychological term that would describe somebody that had a belief that may not even be true and then something happened and they slotted that event that happened into a belief that
Starting point is 00:39:19 wasn't real. Is there a psychological term for that? Yes, it's called confirmation bias and it's just practically every person has it but is unaware of it and would certainly deny it if you ask them. It's all over our lives, I guess. Yeah. It's all over our lives. We end up believing things, not even knowing where that comes from in terms of what we think is the best model car or the best football team or the best state to live in. We end up believing that and we couldn't really even probably voice reasons why we just like that. And then we cherry pick any sort of evidence, whether it's from newspapers or sports announcers or neighbors. but we cherry pick in terms of selecting information that supports what we already believe. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:17 So it would be like really reasonable if you were a young child growing up in somebody that you respected or maybe somebody you didn't respect told you that there were mountain lines here. Regardless of that was like patently false. You would probably go through your life with a slot in your mind that there are potentially mountain lines here. So if you saw a flash of brown fur across the road, that might just easily slot into that place and it just be fact inside of your mind. Yes. Yeah, that would happen. Can you tell me about naive realism, what that means? Yeah, naive realism is, I guess, in a sense, the foundation of confirmation bias. Naive realism is really kind of a fancy term for what I think we've probably all
Starting point is 00:41:04 noticed, and that is almost everyone else we deal with thinks that they're right. And that's because most people do think and believe that their way of perceiving the world and interpreting data and selecting and making decisions. We all believe that we've come up on the right way of living life. So it's like you could be living, you could just kind of have this false reality. Well, yeah, lots of people do. And if anyone tries to convince them that they have a false reality, then they fall back on confirmation bias to really ignore anything they're saying that disputes what they believe. But they'll select all sorts of data.
Starting point is 00:41:51 That confirms their bias. That confirms their bias. This is a great place to hear a story that actually happened. Scott Brown is my long-time good friend. He's a veteran woodsman, and I trust whatever the guy says. You're going to get a kick out of this story. But I want you to ask yourself, which character in this story are you? So, you know, where I work, we sell hunting licenses.
Starting point is 00:42:26 And usually the first, the week right before modern gun deer season opens, it just gets really busy. So I'm back there one night, I'm helping out. And just trying to help them. licenses and a guy walks up and he says hey I need to buy a license and I said okay no problem I said what license do you need and he said well I just need the big game license the annual big game license and I said okay no problem and so I asked for his driver's license and I'm plugging in his information he says well that license allow me to kill one of these and I said
Starting point is 00:42:58 well what is it and he shows me his phone he's got this picture on his phone and when he shows it to me it is without question a bobcat I mean, it's without question a bobcat. I've seen a lot of bobcats, and I'm 100% certain. It was a bobcat. It had speckles on its belly. I mean, it was a bobcat, no question. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:18 And I said, yeah. It's a trail camera picture. Yeah, it's a trail camera picture. Something he had on his trail camera there around his house somewhere. And I said, yeah, yeah. You can shoot bobcats, coyotes. It'll lie you shoot all that stuff. And when I said that, he was just, I mean, he just snapped at me.
Starting point is 00:43:34 He just said, that's not a bobcat. and I said, oh, it wasn't? And he said, no. And he kind of hands the phone back over to me again. I'm thinking maybe I made a mistake. So I look at it again and I come to the same conclusion. It is a bobcat. I mean, there's just no question about it.
Starting point is 00:43:53 And, of course, you know, I didn't say anything. I just said, yeah, yeah, sure enough, you know, just kind of blew him off, you know. If he wants to believe that, he can believe that, I suppose. Well, it gets better. So as he tells me that, there's three or four guys waiting. And they're just standing around us there waiting on us so they can get a license. And the guy goes, did you say you had a mountain line on camera?
Starting point is 00:44:17 The guy says, yeah, yeah. So he kind of turns his phone around and shows this other guy, and it kind of draws a crowd. And there's three or four guys there, and they're all like, oh, man, sure enough. It's a big mountain line. Look at that thing. And they're all just handing it around there. So in the span of about one minute, he had convinced five people standing back there that he had a mountain line on camera and every one of them believed it and had no trouble
Starting point is 00:44:43 believing it. The only person back there that thought otherwise was me. And it was because it was clearly a bobcat. You were like, this is how it starts. Yeah. And I thought, man, this is how the legends and the myths and all these things you hear about people seeing mountain lions get started it just takes one person to see one now all those five guys they left went wherever they went for the rest of day and told how many people they saw a mountain
Starting point is 00:45:09 line on some guys game camera and then thus there's a mountain lion around and everybody's seen it and actually only one guy saw it and it wasn't even a mountain lion now back to myron do you want to delve into the black panther myth absolutely yes i meant to say that in the south particularly, Myron, you hear this, you hear people talking about Black Panthers. Like, I with my own ears have heard countless grown men that I believe to be like rational thinking people. Tell me that they've seen Black Panthers. What's the deal with that? Well, I'll speak in scientific terms of Black Panthers.
Starting point is 00:45:57 We can't have this discussion without talking about Black Panthers. My, oh my, what a topic. Before we start, let me ask you a question. Do you believe in Black Panthers in North America? If you do or you don't. I garon T you, you know some people that do. And they're probably normal, maybe even successful humans. I want you to think about that for a minute. I was shocked when my own father told me this story. When I was a kid, we'd go to Buck Snort. Ain't Ali and Aunt Ollie. They weren't Aunt. They were ain't. Ain't Ollie and ain't Ali. And then you'd go down to Ollie's house and she had the dog trot.
Starting point is 00:46:47 And you'd spend a night down there and you'd hear a panther scream every now and then. Now, do you... I don't... To be honest with you, I would be afraid that it was this cognitive disconnect where Lewin had talked about it so much and they talked about it so much that when you... But when you were there, it was like, in this place, you can hear Panthers Strait. Oh, man. And when you drove into Bucksnort, it was like if you were a city boy and guys like you and I that have a heart for the outdoors, even as a little kid, I mean, it would just be so exciting.
Starting point is 00:47:24 The trees were over the road. And when you pulled up in A.A.A.'s house, the yard was all sandy dirt with doodle bugs. everywhere in this big old dog trot down the middle and a big old porch across the front and June bugs we'd always catch June bugs and fly those June bugs and we'd doodle bug and then at dark you know occasionally these stinking Panthers would scream or you know mountain lines I think there's panther I think there's black mountain lines myself do you really well I mean I don't have any proof of it I just always have heard that you've heard so you've heard of cognitive
Starting point is 00:48:02 I mean, I just believe the propaganda. So you have, like, you're 72 years old, lived in Arkansas all your whole life, and you believe that. Is this thing on? Yeah. I'm not worried about you believing that. I'm just trying to get to the root of where that comes from. Hey.
Starting point is 00:48:20 Who told you about my parents? When I was a kid, when you'd have a group of kids around and your favorite aunt would be there, and she would say, hey, tell us the story. and they'd go, well, you know, there was this little family. And whenever, you know, they were walking home one night. And all of a sudden they looked around, there was a Black Panther, and they'd take the booty off the baby.
Starting point is 00:48:44 And, you know, those stories, that just was all through my childhood. They're just always there. Yeah, you know, throw a booty off, and then the diaper, and then the shirt. And then all of a sudden, you pitch the baby back, you know. So, anyway, but I'd hear adults talking about Black Panthers. Now back to Myron. People for generations have called Panthers, Mountlines, Catamounts, Cougars, lions.
Starting point is 00:49:20 They're all the same animal. You know, they have a whole litany of common localized names that people have called them. But when it comes right down to it, they're all mountain lions. They're all the same animal. There's no other species in North America of Big Cat. No. currently on the landscape. Well, not in the United States anyway.
Starting point is 00:49:40 Well, jaguars down in South. Right. The only animal, large cat that has known to exist or have occurrence for a melanistic color face, which is a, quote, black color face are two of the large cats, jaguars and leopards. Okay. So there has never been a documented melanistic color face. phase of a mountain line in history. Okay?
Starting point is 00:50:13 So not even in the, not even in the, people's hearts, Myron. Not even in the Smithsonian Institute. So if you think in terms of Black Panthers, what most people are calling Black Panthers are Black Mountain Lions. And scientifically,
Starting point is 00:50:32 the animals never existed. I think a lot of it is folklore. I think a lot of it is folklore. I think a lot of it is, misidentification, folklore, you know, things of that nature. And, I mean, is it plausible that a large black cat, a jaguar or leopard, could never occur in Arkansas? It could if one of two things happen. Either A, it escaped from someone's cage somewhere, and it was a jaguar or a leopard.
Starting point is 00:51:05 or B, you had maybe a Jaguar move up from Central America into Arkansas. Which is just not plausible. You'd probably have just as good a chance to see an ostrich as you would have black, you know, jaguar. I have a lot of people, you know, that getting mad at me, well, you're trying to tell me I didn't see it. No. I don't try to tell anybody they didn't see what they think they saw or someone they know didn't see what they think they saw. I just stand on the scientific facts of the issue and the scientific fact behind the whole Black Panther deal. It's just that that particular animal does not exist or has never been documented to occur in a melanistic color phase, a black color phase.
Starting point is 00:51:58 Believing and trusting people is part of the community structure of humankind. It's part of what separates us from the animals and what's made us biologic. successful as a species. If we doubted everything people said and demanded proof of everything, we wouldn't have made it past the difficulty of our archaic past of slinging rocks at stuff and huddling in caves. Blind trust in our fellow man is evidence of our humanity. And deep down, I believe that we want to believe people. Deep down, we want to trust our brother or sister. If there is any good in the folklore, the mountain line, in the Black Panther, it's found in the social mechanics of wanting to believe the best of your neighbor in taking your friend at his word. Perhaps we need some more of that in today's time.
Starting point is 00:52:53 Though mountain lines were certainly gone for the large part of the last hundred years in the South, wouldn't you know it, the truth has swung back around and found us still sitting here, believe. leaving. Mountain lions are back. And this is a conservation success story, but it's also a story of how the truth, though temporarily labeled as folklore, and it was, has once again been found as truthful. Mountain lions are here, and maybe they always have been. And if anybody ever doubts that Gary Newcomb or Brent Reeves did not see a mountain line, I'll punch him in the teeth because I'll believe those two until the day I die. Long live the beast and long live the good word of our brother and sister. First Light's fieldware collection is made for the work that happens long before opening day and continues when the season ends.
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