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  • Cairngorms lynx
  • highlandman
    Free Member

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025/jan/09/two-lynx-released-loose-scotland-scottish-highlands

    Anyone got any additional background on this story yet?

    Is it true, for example?

    1
    piemonster
    Free Member

    Oh boy, this is me glued to Scottish Game Hunting social media comments for the day…

    Also @scotroutes LOLZ at the sighting location. What tarp for Lynx claws?

    matt_outandabout
    Free Member

    It’s definitely true. They have been released.

    Frustrating for all – as the article below quotes Pete Cairns and others, this goes against everything a lot of people have pent years working slowly towards.

    My suspicion is that there’s a good idea of who might be behind this.. Lynx are not exactly pets, and no self respecting organisation is going to do this, and there’s only a small group of Lynx owners….

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cj6z61ylj40o

    MoreCashThanDash
    Full Member

    It does potentially set back the plans to reintroduce them properly, and as Matt says, can’t be too hard to know where they are from.

    Will be interesting to follow, I just hope the animals don’t come to any harm.

    4
    highlandman
    Free Member

    That’s the thing; are these animals wild enough to survive without the support that a formal programme might have provided?

    Getting them here and ready for release is a tricky process that takes a lot of planning. Which genetic pool are they from and is it suitable for deer hunting, for example?

    I bet that the official groups must be raging…

    Where I live in Angus, the illegal beaver release has turned out to be a great success, from a conservationist perspective but even with protection, scores are still being shot here annually. Imagine the irony, if the Kingussie lynx ate the newly introduced Strathspey beavers..

    dissonance
    Full Member

    It does potentially set back the plans to reintroduce them properly

    Although that said those plans are being completely scuppered regardless. I have wondered for a while whether any have been released and just not been noticed.

    If they are a recent introduction and have already been noticed it doesnt suggest they were well chosen.

    and there’s only a small group of Lynx owners….

    I would assume they would have been imported and so not appear on the dangerous animals list. I doubt it would be hard to dodge/confuse customs.

    3
    aberdeenlune
    Free Member

    The Highland Wildlife park folk managed to capture the 2 Lynx last night. There statement says they are sending them down to Edinburgh zoo to be assessed.

    Pity I was going to use them to help me set a KOM at the Drumguish off road climb ?

    anagallis_arvensis
    Full Member

    Wonder why they were so easy to catch?

    Reminds me of the escaped Wolf in Berkshire, went for a walk, got tired climbed into the back of a truck and was taken home.

    1
    aberdeenlune
    Free Member

    Nae food and it’s freezing . Reckon they just walked about the woods dangling a fish from Joes chipper in Kingussie.

    14
    MrSparkle
    Full Member

    Cairngorms lynx – tbf it’s not one of their better deodorants…

    dissonance
    Full Member

    Wonder why they were so easy to catch?

    Would suggest they were pets/zoo animals vs wild ones caught in Europe and then introduced here.

    anagallis_arvensis
    Full Member

    Anyone with half an ounce of sense would release in spring surely?

    4
    franksinatra
    Full Member

    Wonder why they were so easy to catch?

    If they are from Africa they would have been dead easy to find. Just follow all of the women running towards them wearing furry bikinis.

    highlandman
    Free Member

    Best time to release would perhaps be early summer, when the roe deer are producing a new crop of bambi for them to catch easily.

    jag61
    Full Member

    Similar situation to the Worcestershire panther? Hopefully the locals have pedalled fast enough!

    2
    kormoran
    Free Member

    I don’t think they would have lasted long regardless of the weather. There’s a guy who shoots on the land surrounding us, mostly deer. He’s got an array of kit to make the SAS blush – he can basically see everything night and day. It’s incredible and sad at the same time, nothing is safe.

    Anyone heard from perchypanther lately?

    1
    dissonance
    Full Member

    Anyone with half an ounce of sense would release in spring surely?

    Late spring/summer so lots of prey.

    Depends where you are getting your animals from as well. If going for wild then I think later since would want to catch the young lynx as they are leaving their mother.

    anagallis_arvensis
    Full Member

    Similar situation to the Worcestershire panther

    The beast of Belbroughton? That was my cat!

    19
    perchypanther
    Free Member

    Anyone heard from perchypanther lately?

    I’m currently freezing my tits off in a layby on the A9 wearing only a furry bikini in the hope that someone tries to entice me into a van with a sausage supper.
    You have to take your chances when you get them.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Here’s me thinking this was a special Scottish Christmas edition of a deodorant.

    ratherbeintobago
    Full Member

    @dissonance Aren’t lynx meant to be fairly shy and normally avoid people? It’s not a great leap then that someone who knew what they were doing could release them somewhere sparsely populated without anyone noticing…

    4
    a11y
    Full Member

    He’s me thinking this was a special Scottish Christmas edition of a deodorant.

    It’d be a strange aroma – probably like a mix of Buckfast with a hint of deep fried food.

    I assume they caught the lynx by putting out a couple of big cardboard boxes and just waiting?

    img-why-cats-like-boxes-header

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Screenshot_20250109-091626

    1
    piemonster
    Free Member

    It’s quite nice running down that way tbf.

    1
    piemonster
    Free Member

    somewhere sparsely populated without anyone noticing…

    I’m honestly not convinced there’s anywhere in the UK, that is both sparsely populated enough for them to not be spotted directly or by signs of there presence, and suitable for Lynx, in the UK.

    2
    welshfarmer
    Full Member

    Wonder if I am one of a select few to have seen a Lynx in the wild without actually going out to look for them!

    First night of a roadtrip, car-camping in Alaska, drove way up into the hills on a fireroad just outside Anchorage and there was one walking along the track bold as brass. We even drove alongside him long enough for me to get a blurred photo (old school slide lost in the attic somewhere). We spoke to loads of native Alaskans on our 4 week trip but none of them had ever seen a lynx in the wild so we must have been extremely fortunate. Before our flight home we camped up the same track and I was able to have a tete a tete with a wolf not 20 meters from the tent while I went out of the tent for a pee in the early hours. Fantastic country if anyone ever gets the chance to visit.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    The next planned beaver release is in Glen Affric. I imagine that would work for lynx too, though maybe not simultaneously. Paul Listers estate at Allerdale might also be a candidate. He’d done some preparatory work, though that did include fencing in the whole area.

    2
    MrSparkle
    Full Member

    Oh, do you have any links?

    13
    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Not anymore. I had two until yesterday…

    2
    perchypanther
    Free Member

    Oh, do you have any links?

    … or, failing that, square and tattie scone?

    1
    bruneep
    Full Member

    been captured

    Screenshot 2025-01-09 095140

    scotroutes
    Full Member
    5
    kormoran
    Free Member

    been captured

    They found a couple of trappers on Lynkdin

    1
    welshfarmer
    Full Member

    Surely the trappers would have been on Lynxskin

    Sandwich
    Full Member

    Cairngorms lynx – tbf it’s not one of their better deodorants…

    Smells of heavy with top-notes of boiled haggis!

    5

    They’re out there…

    453250815_2132283350471006_3035354990968735320_n

    highlandman
    Free Member

    Very good, r-m. To be fair, it’s a fairly distinctive profile, even if it does then show your age…

    1

    Very good, r-m. To be fair, it’s a fairly distinctive profile, even if it does then show your age…

    I prefer vintage. Horrible bastards dumped us at the top of a hill and made us walk. Circa 2012.

    MoreCashThanDash
    Full Member

    the illegal beaver release has turned out to be a great success

    *childish giggles*

    highlandman
    Free Member

    Well, lynx are supposed to eat beaver ? and in the wild, they are the main predator for the giant rodent.  They represent one of the main reasons that beavers are both nocturnal and quite shy.

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