Thanks, Rose.
P-22 was, well, the 22nd tracked puma in a National Park Service study that
began when my brother Woody (perfect name, eh?) was Superintendent of the
Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. He took a job at Yosemite
just after P-22 turned up and is retired now. But the program started some
20 years ago under his watch.

Woody told me, when that study started, how difficult it was because many
of the ranchers and other property owners adjacent to the SMMNRA hated that
the mountain lions were being protected under the study -- and let him and
the NPS know it. And a lot of them were $$$ people who complained loudly to
the Powers That Be and wanted them moved or eradicated rather than be
bothered themselves to secure their llamas or alpacas or sheep or whatever
they were raising from wild predators who were there first. And by
eradicated, I mean there were instances of the animals being shot, and
poisoned bait being put out for them.

They wouldn't DARE now. And the start of the wildlife crossing is just
further testament of how much has changed in 20 years. Thanks to P-22.

sniff
Deb









On Sun, Feb 5, 2023 at 7:42 PM Rose Ellen Auerbach <auerb...@armory.com>
wrote:

> That captured everything so well.
>
> People who haven't spent time in LA often don't realize how much of the
> area is undeveloped and designated to stay that way. Griffith Park, where
> P-22 lived and the memorial took place, is this huge spread right in the
> middle of the city. The Santa Monica Mountains cut right though the city.
> The Angeles Forest is a stone's throw from Pasadena.
>
> We're used to urban wildlife in these parts, but it's usually skunks or
> rattlesnakes or the very occasional deer. Then P-22 showed up, looked
> around and basically said, "Eh, not the home I went looking for, but I can
> work with this." And the local humans looked at this huge cat who was just
> a little out of place, and said, "Awesome new neighbor. Yeah, we know:
> Don't pet the kitty. Should we leave some water out?"
>
> Other cities have stories about seldom-seen creatures that roam the hills,
> but those are usually cryptids like Bigfoot. In LA, we had a freakin'
> documented mountain lion. His being here was a fluke, but it led to the
> construction of a wildlife bridge. It's mostly to help increase genetic
> diversity among various wildlife populations split by highways - but if
> another lion takes the bridge and wanders down to Griffith Park, we're not
> going to be mad about it.
>
> --Rose
>
> On Sat, Feb 4, 2023, 7:21 AM danny burstein <dan...@panix.com> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> https://www.wsj.com/articles/service-for-p-22-mountain-lion-celebration-of-life-tribute-los-angeles-11675469317?st=dbvp33f9d4j46fd&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
>>
>> _____________________________________________________
>> Knowledge may be power, but communications is the key
>>                      dan...@panix.com
>> [to foil spammers, my address has been double rot-13 encoded]
>>
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-- 
Deborah Speer
Features Editor

POLLSTAR
deb...@pollstar.com
559-905-1599 (cell)

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