In The Press Home.

Beast Of Braemar.
By Heather Greenaway.
Is this amazing picture proof that big cats like panthers are roaming the hills of Scotland.

This is the first photograph of a big cat roaming the hills of Scotland.
The animal was captured on film by hill walker Raymond Dougherty on the Invercauld Estate, near Braemar.
Raymond, 49, from Dunblane, yesterday described the stunning sighting. He said: “I was climbing the Munros on the Invercauld Estate when I stopped to get something out of my rucksack. I looked up and saw a black object moving through the heather. It kept moving out of sight, one minute I could see it, then I couldn’t see it, then I could. I thought it was a big Labrador and looked round for the owners. But than I realised it wasn’t a dog and shouted to my friend to look.”
When the animal heard Raymond’s voice, it stopped and than ran up the hill. Raymond, who was accompanied by pal Steve Mason, said: “It was definitely a wild animal. I grabbed the camera out of my bag - I knew it wouldn’t be a great picture but at least it would prove that I actually saw the big cat. You could tell by the length and the way it ran that it wasn’t a dog. It was amazing, it went like a bat out of hell. It ran with a fluid, flowing motion of a cat and it must have been at least five feet long, with a tail as long as its body. It was quite squat and muscular, with straight pointed ear’s, it looked like a puma. ....I’ve no doubt it was a big cat, it certainly was not a deer.”
The Invercauld Estate gas received several reports of a strange black creature roaming the hills.
Estate factor Simon Blackett said: “I’ve heard reports of a mysterious creature over the past few weeks and the last reported sighting was a fortnight ago. The animal has appeared fairly recently but it seems to have disappeared again.”
Mr Blackett said the animal has caused no problems but staff are taking no chances. He said: “It is potentially very dangerous. It is elusive and all the sightings have been in the mountains. Fortunately, it hasn’t ventured into the town.”
Big cat fever exploded in 1983 (actually it was 1963 at Shooters Hill in London, M F) with the first sightings of the Beast of Bodmin Moor and a trail of more than 80 sheep carcasses allegedly left by the Beast of Exmoor. They were dismissed as myths but more sightings have sparked new fears. Some big cats may have been kept as pets and released into the wild after a crackdown on owning wild animals.
Reuel Chisholm, of the Scottish Big Cat Society, (Must be a mis-quote here I do not know the gentleman, MF) studied the photographs. He said: “It is difficult to identify it or gauge its bulk. With its pointed ears, it does seem cat-like and, going by the witness’ description of an all-black animal with a long tail, it is most likely to be a leopard - actually a very dark brown type of panther with black spots. It is hard to tell much from a photograph because movement is important in identification. Its too thick set to be a fox.” Sightings are not rare as people have reported seeing a black cat in Strathdon and another in Ballater. Wether its the same animal is impossible to tell but I’ll investigate.”

Mark Fraser, another society member, said: “We have had 67 reports of big cats in Scotland this year. It is very rare to get a photo. It could either be a black leopard or a Kellas, which is a wildcat about the size of a large dog.”
In January 2002, a “sleek black beastie” was disturbed in its lair in the Glens of Foudland, near Insch, Aberdeenshire. It bit a woman on the thigh before fleeing.
In January 2001, a woman walking her dog spotted a creature the size of a medium-weight dog in the hills near Braemar and a farmer saw a similar beast in 1997 on the Invercauld Estate.
Email h.greenaway@sundaymail.co.uk