The Beast Of Yorkshire: Photo Reveals 'Puma' Crouching In Foliage

'I think it was trying to make sure I didn’t see it'

A factory worker has taken a photo of what appears to be a puma on the prowl in the British countryside - in what could be the most convincing sighting to date.

The shy animal, which has golden-brown fur and piercing eyes, can be seen hiding behind a tree, looking straight into the camera lens.

According to the nature lover who spotted it, the big cat stayed put for 15 seconds before slinking off into the Yorkshire greenery.

Crouching rambler, peeking puma: Lee Clifford came face-to-face with this beast in the Yorkshire countryside
Crouching rambler, peeking puma: Lee Clifford came face-to-face with this beast in the Yorkshire countryside
SWNS.com

It is the latest in a string of sightings of big cats in Britain - with more than 50 being reported to police since 2001.

The photographer, Lee Clifford, said it is the clearest photo of a wild cat in Britain he has ever seen.

The 44-year-old, of North Cave, Yorkshire, said he spotted the animal after glimpsing movement in the corner of his eye in the countryside near Hull, Yorkshire.

Clifford said: “It was definitely a puma. It was a lot bigger than a normal cat.

Animal remains near where Clifford claims he spotted the puma
Animal remains near where Clifford claims he spotted the puma
SWNS.com

“I have never seen anything as clear as this before. I have looked on the internet a bit but I have never seen anything like it.”

Clifford said he saw the creature while out walking, after he decided to sit down for a lunchtime snack.

He said: “I wouldn’t have noticed it usually, but I saw a bit of movement. Then I looked more closely and saw it standing there.

“I think it was trying to make sure I didn’t see it.

Further animal remains spotted close to the puma sighting
Further animal remains spotted close to the puma sighting
SWNS.com

“I was eating a tin of mackerel at the time so maybe it got a smell of that.

“It was just watching me and hiding there. It was probably there for about 15 seconds.

“If I hadn’t stood up it would have stayed there longer but it was gone.

“It disappeared, completely vanished. I walked up to where it was standing but there was nothing there.”

The animal lover said he has decided to share his photos, which he took in 2013, to prompt others to report any sightings.

A file picture of a puma for comparison at Shepreth Wildlife Park in Hertfordshire
A file picture of a puma for comparison at Shepreth Wildlife Park in Hertfordshire
SWNS.com

And though he hasn’t seen the puma since, he has found the remains of other animals and clumps of fur in the same spot.

He added: “I have been looking for three years since but not had any luck. It has become an obsession.”

Rumours of big cats prowling the British countryside have endured for years and in July a zoo owner claimed sightings of the infamous Beast of Dartmoor are very likely to have been genuine glimpses of a pack of pumas released in the area during the late 1970s/ early 80s.

Benjamin Mee, who owns Dartmoor Zoo told the Plymouth Herald pumas roamed the region for more than 30 years until 2010, when he believes the entire pack was wiped out by the coldest winter on record.

Mary Chipperfield with some of her tigers
Mary Chipperfield with some of her tigers
Evening Standard Getty

He said: “Puma were released in the Sparkwell area around the 1980s and there were many sightings.

“I even saw one when I first came here in 2006. They used to come out into the village. I saw one by a crossing.

“The farmers don’t want the publicity and wouldn’t tell you this if you asked but there were a lot of animals lost to the pumas during those years.”

Danny Bamping, the founder of the British Big Cats Society, told the newspaper: “When the zoo was shut down, Mary Chipperfield [now deceased] agreed to transfer her five pumas to [then-owner Ellis] Daw at Dartmoor Wildlife Park.

“But when they arrived, Ellis told me that there were only two pumas in the consignment but five tags in the cage. Mary Chipperfield told Ellis she had broken down on Dartmoor and that somehow three of the pumas had escaped. We think she let them out on the moor.

“She wasn’t even obliged to report it because releasing exotic species wasn’t even illegal until 1981. It was just brushed under the carpet and never talked about. It has never come out until now.”

The story of the Dartmoor pumas may well explain the discovery of some of the mutilated carcasses of animals in the area, but it doesn’t quite account for the fact there have been thousands of reported sightings of large felines on moorland and in woods and fields across the whole of the UK.

The animals - normally black or brown - have been seen in almost every county in Britain, from Cornwall to the tip of Scotland.

Sightings of mystery beasts have largely been blamed on the introduction of the 1976 Wild Animals Act, which curbed a growing fashion for exotic and potentially dangerous pets.

Some owners were thought to have freed their animals into the wild to avoid falling foul of the law.

Nonetheless close encounters with big cats are extremely rare. Expert Rick Minter said: “Their hearing and movement are exceptional, which helps them avoid close contact with people.

“In the event of a close-up encounter, you should stay calm and face towards the animal as you back off, but not threaten or aggravate it.

“The chances are it will have backed off very quickly first.”

The only native wild cat species in the UK is the Scottish wildcat, which looks similar to a domesticated tabby, but there have been calls to reintroduce the Eurasian lynx, thought to have disappeared from Britain around 1,000 years ago.

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