Great Video of a Mountain Lion & Javelina in a “Lay-Up” Area
I found this rare video gem of a cougar on YouTube and had to share it. While you enjoy this great look at the mountain lion being chased by the group of javelina, pay close attention to the area the lion is laid-up in.
I have written other blog posts HERE , HERE, and HERE and posted scouting photos on our Wildlife Callers’ Facebook Page that talk about terrain considerations when scouting and calling for mountain lions. This video captures nicely the “lay-up” concept that we talk about. As you watch the video and the camera pans right you will see (at about 27 seconds) the lion has chosen a daytime hideout just below a saddle located on the ridge line above the rock/brush pile it pops out of.
Without seeing the area in person and being able to walk the ridges around the brushed up rock pile the cat jumped out of, we can only make an educated guess that the lion is using the ridge/saddle as part of it’s travel route. Based on past experience with travel paths and scouting for lay-up areas to call into, it stands to reason that ridge line is at least one of the travel routes in the area.
It is also highly likely that this or another lion will use this lay-up again in the future. Having a location like this jotted down in a calling journal will provide a spot to call into every single time you’re in the area. Other than calling the area and getting a mountain lion to respond, there is no reliable way to know exactly when the cat will be back. Based on the radio collar data that we’ve looked at and the trail camera evidence that we’ve collected, the day or night and actual time the lion will show back up can’t be accurately predicted. However, paths that they use for travelling get used again and again.
Catching the lion the next time it’s in this lay-up is a game of chance, but persistence pays. If you have 20 locations like this identified with scat, tracks, other sign, and perhaps some trail camera photos and you consistently call into them, eventually you’ll be in the right place at the right time and you’ll get your big cat to come in. We’re certain it’s a whole lot more reliable than random calling into areas that simply “look like good cat country” but have no physical evidence to go with the good looks.
Thanks again for reading. Comments and questions are always welcome at the bottom of this page.
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Good luck this season,
Mark Healy
480-882-1210






