Jim Bennett had seen enough.
The cougar had already attacked his dog, ripped up a doghouse and
now was on the porch, sniffing the doorknob, ignoring Bennett's shouts,
looking at Bennett right through the glass on the door.
"I figured I had no choice," Bennett said. "I had to kill it."
Bennett got his handgun, a .357 Magnum. The cougar was still at the
door, two feet away.
"I opened the door a little bit and stuck the gun out the door and shot it," Bennett said. "I didn't open the door very much, just enough to get the pistol out the door."
The shooting took place at Bennett's home in rural Jacobson, a few
miles north of Big Sandy Lake in northern Minnesota's Aitkin County.
Cougars are very rare in Minnesota, but the state Department of
Natural Resources receives about 50 reports a year of sightings. The
DNR captured a cougar in the Worthington area of southwestern
Minnesota in the early 1990s, and good photos have also been made of
some sightings.
Bill Berg, recently retired DNR wildlife research biologist, has kept
the cougar sighting records since 1974 and said most of the animals
are merely passing through the state.
"There are times when the state has no wild cougars at all," Berg said. "There is no indication that they have set up a home range in the state."
Biologists plan to examine the dead cougar to try to determine whether it was a wild or domestic cougar and perhaps tell why it approached so close to humans. Cougars normally avoid humans.
Berg said he believes the cougar shot by Bennett was a wild animal.
"It's got all of its claws, and all the domestic cougars I know of are declawed, at least on the front," Berg said.
Cougars are the biggest wildcats seen in Minnesota and can measure
around 10 feet from their nose to the end of their long, rope-like
tail.
Bennett, 56, said he measured the dead cougar at about 5 1/2 feet
long.
Tony Arhart, the DNR conservation officer who investigated the
incident, said it was the first time he had ever been called to deal
with a cougar.
"It's almost unheard of for a cougar to come into contact with a
human," Arhart said. "There was no enticement I saw to attract a nuisance animal. There's no livestock."
The encounter with the cougar began about 11:30 p.m. Monday when
Bennett returned to his home on 120 acres of woods and swampland about
55 miles west of Duluth. He parked the truck and let Shadow, his
2-year-old chocolate Labrador retriever, out of the kennel.
"We started walking toward the house, and she just shot by me for the house, and I looked up and this cougar was coming down the porch
steps," Bennett said.
The two animals went after each other, growling and barking, a tangle
of fur and tails.
"The dog was doing good for a while, and the cougar finally got her down on her back and was biting her neck," Bennett said. I ran over and kicked the cougar in the head a couple of times.
The cougar took off.
"The dog and I went in the house," Bennett said. "I thought that was the end of it."
A couple of hours later, Bennett had fallen asleep in a chair while
watching television, and he was wakened by Shadow's barking.
"The dog about went crazy," Bennett said. "I said, "Just relax.' I went and turned the porch light on, and there the cougar was, tearing the bedding out of the doghouse."
Then the cougar left the porch and went behind the garage.
"Ten minutes later, it was back up sniffing the doorknob," Bennett said. "I couldn't get it away. I was beating on the door and yelling. I figured it would turn tail and run. But it didn't. It stood right there and looked at me through the glass on the door."
That's when Bennett got the gun.
"I got a round off and that was the end of that. I hit it in the
head."
Bennett, a self-employed stump grinder, said he had plenty of wildlife on his property and even saw a cougar about a month ago along his driveway but figured it was just passing through. His closest neighbor lives more than a mile away.
He believes Shadow saved him from an unpleasant encounter with the
cougar.
"The dog basically saved my butt," he said. "I don't want to think about what would have happened without the dog. I don't think it (the cougar) would have been too happy with me. It was not afraid of me."
NOTICE: In accordance with Title
17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed, without profit, for
research or educational purposes. We do our best, as well, to give credit to the
original news source who published these Guns Save Lives stories out of respect
and appreciation for their willingness to spread the word that Guns Save Lives
-- and when an original link is available, we ALWAYS send all our visitors to
read the original article on the original site where it was posted. God Bless
the Americans that publish these stories - for assisting Americans in hearing
the truth about guns saving lives.