Mountain lion rescued from 50 feet above home in Southern California
Firefighters helped rescue a large mountain lion from a tree outside a home in Southern California over the weekend, authorities said.
The homeowner spotted the wild cat on Saturday afternoon while doing yard work around the residence in Hesperia, a city in the Mojave Desert near the San Bernardino Mountains.
The person alerted authorities and San Bernardino County firefighters were dispatched to the property, where they found the cougar perched on a branch about 50 feet above ground, according to a press release from San Bernardino County Fire.
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife was called in to help devise a plan to safely extract the animal from the tree. Wildlife officials ultimately tranquilized the mountain lion, after which firefighters approached it using a tall ladder, securing it in a rescue harness before lowering it to the ground.
Leaving the lion in the tree would not have been safe for the community.
"It is common for young mountain lions to wander outside what some would consider normal habitat in an attempt to establish their territory," Kevin Brennan, a biologist with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, said in a statement Saturday.
Mountain lions are quiet, solitary, elusive predators that typically avoid people, and attacks on humans are rare. But they have been known to prey on pets and livestock.
"Leaving the lion in the tree would not have been safe for the community," Rick Fischer, a warden with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, said in a statement Saturday.
Wildlife officials later released the mountain lion back into the wild.
"Once the lion regained consciousness," Fischer said, "we ensured he safely returned to his suitable habitat."