"What's that horrible smell?" I asked Karen. "Eww... It smells like cat poop."
"It's so strong, it must be a cougar," Karen replied. We looked around. Cougars mark their territory with stinky poop and spray. There have been multiple cougar sightings in the area. A local home surveillance camera showed seven cougars in their yard! Cougars are normally solitary hunters and highly elusive. The cougar was probably watching us.
Today we hiked 6.2 miles on bicycle trails in shady Squilchuck State Park.
Pacific rattlesnakes are non-aggressive. Don't provoke them. Over the years, I have seen Karen throw rocks at rattlesnakes and flick them into the bushes with her pole. The rattlesnakes got fighting mad and came after her. Even baby rattlesnakes are poisonous.
"Leave rattlesnakes alone," I said. "Let's take a wide berth around them." She agreed.
I rarely see rattlesnakes while hiking. Rattlesnakes live in rocky areas and near water. Look before stepping or reaching.
Heat wave in the West! Triple digits. Tomorrow we will hike earlier and much higher on a shady trail to Lake Clara and Marion.
Photos:
Mountain Tiger Lily.
We found half of a Robin's egg on the trail. A baby bird just hatched.
Mountain Ladyslippers are rare in arid North Central Washington. They grow in moist, rich humus, not on dry hillsides.
looks like a triffid. Probably narrowly escaped with your life! <img src="[thepropgallery.com]; alt="The Prop Gallery | The Day of the Triffids (1981) - Full size Triffid plant"/>
Today I learned cougars mark their territory with poop and spray. Both stink terribly.
I'm not worried. After hiking 46 years over 200 miles per year, I only saw two cougars. Backpacking in Olympic National Park at 22.
@LiterateHiker They're also the biggest cat to purr and the do it loudly. I had a job where I could scratche them behind the ears and they'd purr loud enough so people about 10-15 feet away could hear. Didn't pay well, but it was a fun job!
What? No pictures of cougars or rattlesnakes? False advertising, LOL
If I saw a cougar or rattlesnake, I would not faff around taking photos.
Look up:
Cougar in Washington State, images
Pacific Rattlesnake, images
@LiterateHiker I know you wouldn’t. Just teasing you. You have such amazing pictures. I wouldn’t want you to waste one with the motion-induced blurring when you were running away
Running is the worst thing you can do with a large predator. It makes you prey.
Stand your ground.
Make yourself look as big as possible.
Look strong and fierce.
Slowly back up. For a half-mile if necessary,
If you have an umbrella, kneel down and open it in the face of a charging grizzly. Amazingly, this worked in Glacier National Park. The grizzly stopped, sniffed the umbrella and walked away.
Awesome pics be careful
I am always careful. In 46 years of hiking, I only saw two cougars: at age 22 in Olympic National Park.
I never hike alone. Cougar are unlikely to attack a group.
For me, cougar = no hike, heat wave = no hike. Nice photos.
For me cougar = no hike, rattle snakes = no hike. Heat wave probably means stay close to home and go walking during the early morning or some-such. Summer heat in Arizona means rattle snakes (and dangerous heat exposure) = no hike. To be sure, there are some great alternatives (walk around the sidewalks and street at 6 am for example, to avoid the heat and snakes) but I'm a big wuss as to those dangers.
@MsKathleen
That makes sense. Where I am the height above sea level is about 4000 feet so it’s cooler here at certain times of day and a walk around the neighborhood at those times in the summer so is possible.