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UPDATE: Photos of dead feline on side of Carson City road likely a bobcat and not a tiger, says NDOW

UPDATE: Carson Now reader Misty Syms-Olvera submitted a photo of the dead animal, with a message that the photo was taken by her husband at around 8:30 a.m. Monday morning. Scroll to the photo and click on to enlarge. The photo was sent to NDOW, which noted that it was indeed a bobcat.
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A photo taken Monday from a Carson City resident appears at first glance to look like, of all things, a dead tiger on the side of the road. The photo shows large paws and even stripes on the animal, similar to those of a tiger.

Nevada wildlife officials, however, said further evaluation of the photo provides enough convincing detail that the feline on the side of the road is most likely to be a bobcat and not a tiger.

Mike Bohemier said he took the photo Monday morning on Curry Street behind the Nevada State Railroad Museum at around 10 a.m. and then later went back to look for it again and it was gone. He wondered if there was any information on what appeared to be a dead tiger.

"I know it sounds crazy," he wrote.

And the photo at first glance would make anyone seeing it wonder. Tigers are exotic animals and not in any way part of the natural ecosystem anywhere in the U.S. If there were a tiger dead on the side of the road, it would have meant the tiger belonged to someone permitted to have one and that it had escaped.

The photo led to a search along Curry Street by Carson City Sheriff Ken Furlong, which turned up nothing. Carson City Public Works Street Supervisor Justin Tiearney said he usually gets the animal calls and there was no such call this morning.

The Nevada Department of Wildlife had not received any reports of a dead tiger on the side of the road in Carson City either, but instead confirmed an incident this weekend involving a mountain lion that climbed up a tree in a residential neighborhood.

Even NDOW spokeswoman Ashley Sanchez said Bohemier's photo, at first glance, appeared to look like a dead tiger on the side of the road.

"I thought, 'well there's going to be an investigation of this,'" she said. She then turned the photo over to NDOW wildlife biologists who deduced it was instead a large bobcat.

The main reason being the short bobbed tail on the animal and also the color pattern in which bobcats in Nevada can be spotted, stripped and can range from gray to orange to tan, noting the NDOW webpage on bobcats.

Although no carcass was found, the alleged bobcat was likely looking for food and was hit by a vehicle. Unless a carcass turns up, all that's left is the photo and the careful evaluation of the photo by NDOW wildlife biologists who say that it is most likely a bobcat.

What is known, however, is there was a mountain lion that was discovered up a tree Saturday in a residential area off of Sonoma Street. The discovery led wildlife officials to dart the animal for public safety reasons, according to Sanchez.

When the mountain lion, estimated to be 1.5 years old, didn't come down from the tree and instead climbed higher and then later was determined to be unconscious, NDOW contacted the Carson City Fire Department, which used its ladder truck to pluck the cat from the tree.

NDOW made the difficult decision to euthanize the mountain lion for public safety reasons because the lion couldn't fend for itself in the wild, said Sanchez, explaining that due to drought conditions, there is a huge lack of prey species right now for mountain lions to feed on.

So the lions are coming down into the valleys, moving closer to homes where they are preying on deer, livestock, rodent and pets. A mountain lion was euthanized last month in the Genoa area by USDA APHIS Wildlife Services after it had killed multiple calfs belonging to a local rancher, said Sanchez.

The one captured and euthanized in Carson City, however, had likely become conditioned to look for food in residential areas, making the animal a public safety concern, said Sanchez.

"This mountain lion was estimated to be a year and a half and was learning to hunt," she said.

"If we were to re-release it, it would likely have made itself back into the neighborhood for its food source," she said. "We are responsible for the health of wildlife and even more so, public safety. If we have a mountain lion that keeps coming back into a neighborhood then it could become a public safety issue."

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Important Qualities in Elected Officials

Attend the April 27th workshop at 9am – Qualities of an Effective Elected Official.

There are still a few spaces left for the "Victorian Secrets With Tea" on Saturday, April 27, 2024, from 1:00 to 3:00 p.m. The deadline for signing up has been extended to Thursday, April 25. The Carson City Historical Society (CCHC) presents this afternoon tea in the Carriage House behind the Foreman-Roberts Historic House at 1207 Carson Street, Carson City.

Every month, the Park Rangers offer various Ranger-Led programs that include educational opportunities, historical fun, and exciting adventures. All programs are offered for free and take place in one of the many Carson City parks and open space areas.

St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in Carson City will host its first "Walking as One at 1" labyrinth walk on Saturday, May 4 from 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. at 314 N. Division at Telegraph.

"Walking as One at 1" happens on World Labyrinth Day each year where participants across the globe engage in a labyrinth walk at 1 p.m. local time. This synchronized practice creates a 24-hour rolling wave of peaceful energy that passes from one time zone to the next across the world. The idea is to collectively contribute to a sense of unity and harmony.

The wise early settlers of Carson City made sure future residents would enjoy the beauty and the endless benefits that come with the planting of trees. What was then but a barren high-desert sagebrush landscape, is today a celebration of the hardiness of trees as well as the early settlers.

On Friday, April 26 at 1 p.m., the Washoe Valley Forum hosts a living history presentation, “The Reno Cure.” Local authors and historians David and Gayle Woodruff assume the fictive characters of wrangler Clive, and cook/housekeeper Vivian, that worked at a Washoe Valley “divorce ranch” from the 1940s to 1960s.

Local musician Liz Broscoe has released a song that features Lake Tahoe and the challenges to keep it blue, and it could become the next battle cry to protect the lake.

Liz has been working on a new album for over a year and she wrote "Mother Earth" as one of the songs for that album. She had finished writing the song when she saw the videos of the thousands of pounds of trash left on Zephyr Shoals on the 4th of July.

A local family and others aided in the search and location of a missing elderly woman Saturday night in Carson City.

Carson High School named Mikey Hoffer and Selma Works as the 2024 Prom King and Queen. A short coronation ceremony was held during the prom dance. Additionally, Rodrigo Diaz and Alissa Powers were crowned Carson High School’s Friendship Ball King and Queen during that dance Thursday evening in the Morse Burley Gym.

Carson City’s Community Development Director Hope Sullivan will be the guest speaker at the next Rotary Club of Carson City meeting. The public is invited to attend.

Here is the Carson City area road report for the week of April 22-28, 2024. Closures are expected at the following locations due to road and utility work:

The Carson City School Board meeting will take place Tuesday, April 23 beginning at 6 p.m. at Carson High School.

Join local authors and historians David and Gayle Woodruff as they look back to those golden days of yesteryear when Ben, Adam, Hoss and Little Joe stood for honesty, decency and owned about 1/3 of the Lake Tahoe Basin (at least in the TV show).

On Sunday, May 5 head down to the Carson Ridge Disc Golf Park for a fun tournament-style round of Cinco de Mayo Disc Golf beginning at 10 a.m. Rain or Shine, the round will include both the Pony Express and Stadium Courses for a total of 27 holes.

Carson City Symphony's Youth Strings ensembles, Youth Chorus, and Not Quite Ready for Carnegie Hall Players (NQR) adult intermediate string ensemble, will feature music and dance of the Scottish Highland in a "Music Here and Afar" concert on Thursday, April 25, 6:30 p.m., at the Carson City Community Center, 851 E. William Street. This family friendly concert is open to all and admission is free.

Drea Cabral is quiet, academic, and driven; however, after just one conversation with her, one realizes she is so much more than that. Drea is a musician who finds escape and freedom in her music.

Are you looking for an angel in your life? Look no further, this special kitty lives up to his name. Angel is one of the sweetest cats I have ever met.

Thursday evening, Carson City Supervisors approved the language for two ballot questions dealing with an increase in taxes for the specific purpose of fixing local roads.

Escape rooms are opening in Carson City this weekend at 716 N. Carson St. Owners Jennifer Smith and Tracey Hudson have worked to create unique escape room experiences that offer classic games alongside all-new puzzles to appeal to game lovers and problem solvers of all experience levels.

Conditions and weather permitting, a number of prescribed fires are in the works through spring to remove fuels that can feed unwanted wildland fires.

There are two prescribed burns around the Lake Tahoe area this week, and a number of fires across the Sierra and into the foothills in western Nevada.

Lanes reduced on U.S. 50 in west Dayton this Friday morning through Monday morning as we replace concrete barrier.

The Nevada State Museum and University of Nevada, Reno conducted archaeological excavations at Fort Churchill State Park in the mid-1970s. Museum staff and research associates are re-examining these collections reflecting U.S. Army and other military units’ occupation of the fort between 1860 and 1869.

Nevada’s unemployment rate decreased by 0.1 percentage points from February to March and now sits at 5.1 percent, according to the state's Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation’s March 2024 economic report. The labor force in the state shrunk by 114 people.

The Nevada Alliance of Boys & Girls Clubs is honored to announce bipartisan approval of a statewide initiative to expand early learning centers and child care access for Nevada families.

The Nevada Supreme Court has upheld the state’s contentious “ghost gun” ban, reversing a lower court’s ruling that the law banning the sale of unfinished frames and receivers of a firearm was unconstitutionally vague.

By state law, once Carson City’s population reaches 60,000 residents, they will be mandated to create a new courtroom complete with a new judge and staff.

However, that comes with a price tag of at least $800,000 in staffing alone — and doesn’t include the price to expand the courthouse.

Reno Tahoe Comedy is proud to present Bobcat Goldthwait at Piper's Opera house in Virginia City on Saturday, April 27. Since his first appearance on the David Letterman Show at the age of 20, Bobcat has gone on to maintain a thriving career as a writer, director, actor, voice actor and stand-up comedian.

The Nevada State Prison Preservation Society is once again offering tours to the community beginning in May and continuing through the month of October.

The Carson City School District will host a quarterly Community Connections event next week, Wednesday, April 24, 2024, from 5:45-7:30 p.m. at Carson High School.

Carson Animal Services Initiative, also known as CASI, welcomes the community to enjoy an evening of great music, delicious food and wonderful live and silent auction items to support animals in need.