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Sighting of a Big Cat Fuels Debate in Moray
Forres Gazette: 4th April 2007
A SIGHTING of a big black cat in the Forres area has reignited debate
about whether a wild animal is roaming the area.
There were several similar sightings about 20 years ago at various
locations around the town, many of them recorded in 'The Forres
Gazette' at the time.
More recently, a local woman who was returning from visiting friends
in Dallas a few weeks ago spotted an unusual creature from her car,
very close to the road.
The woman, who does not want to be named for fear of ridicule, saw the
animal near the Dallas turn-off on the outskirts of Rafford. She told
her husband, who said that at first he thought she had been seeing things.
"She was trying to rule out what it wasn't," he said. "I said it must
have been a deer, as I have seen them there myself, but she said it
wasn't a deer, and it wasn't a dog or a cow or a horse either, but it
looked like a big cat. My son was in the car, and he saw it too."
He said that although the daylight was fading, his wife was able to
describe the animal as a "big cat which was dark in colour".
He said that he had treated it as a bit of a joke, but his wife was
certain about what she had seen.
One of several sightings of a big cat around the Forres area about 20
years ago was reported by 'Gazette' receptionist Francis Murray, who
was out walking with her son, Andrew, near the Mannachie area.
"Andrew was a toddler, and he is 24 now," she said.
"He was toddling along beside me when I saw the thing near Mannachie,
long before there were any houses there, and it was all just fields."
She added: "A lot of people had reported seeing this thing around
Forres, but I was really surprised when I saw it walking up the edge
of the field."
She got a clear look at the creature, and described it as a well-built
black cat.
"At first I thought it must be a black Labrador, which would have been
more likely, but it was bigger and too long in the body, and its ears
were back," she said.
After studying footage of a recent big cat sighting in the Banff area,
on the Banffshire Journal website, Ms Murray said it wasn't unlike
what she remembered seeing all those years ago.
The CFZ Alien Big Cat Study Group, which charts sightings on the
Internet, has instances of big cat sightings – some with pictures –
throughout the UK, including an entry from a motorist who claims to
have seen a black cat on the Grantown Road in the winter of 2003.
His entry was recorded on October 19, the day after he claimed to have
spotted the creature while driving south on the road between Forres
and Carrbridge.
"The road has a steep embankment of silver birch trees on the right
and pine forest on the left," said the unknown author.
"I see a lot of wonderful wildlife in this area, including deer, and
it is a joy to experience. Yesterday, around 9am, I saw something I
have never seen before. From a distance of under 200 yards, a very
large black cat with an unusual gait crossed the road from my right to
left. By the time I reached the spot, it had vanished. This was not a
domestic cat or a dog. It was walking quickly. I have not reported
this to the police yet because I know what their response will
probably be. This big cat was so distinctive and unusual that I want
to know more about what it might be and whether you believe I should
report it. My daughter tells me there have been previous reports of
'the Moray Cat', but I don't know where."
SSPCA inspector, Scott Elphinstone, said it was not outwith the realm
of possibility that big cats could live wild in the area, feeding off
game such as rabbits.
"Since I have been here, there have been quite a few sightings around
the Moray area and Aberdeenshire," he said. "I'm sure that not all of
them are right, but there does seem to be something."
He said that it would "make sense" that sightings had been reported
all around the area, with experts suggesting that a big cat can have a
hunting ground with a radius of 60 miles.
"It really makes you wonder," he said.
"The animals could probably survive in the wild by getting prey such
as rabbits to keep them going." Forres Gazette: 4th April 2007
Do you have any information on the above reports. Were you the person
involved, or are you aware of any more sightings in this area. We would appreciate any information that you could
give us.