A wildcat, either a bobcat or mountain lion, has apparently been living in Rock Springs and has gained a local fan base.
Thatâs why folks donât like having her â the catâs usually referred to as female, but nobody knows for sure â being talked about too much on social media, resident Katrina Ann Fleck told Cowboy State Daily.
Fleck said her young adult daughter was concerned when a flurry of posts about the wildcat popped up recently.
âShe said, âMan, I hope they donât bother her because of that post,ââ Fleck said, adding that sheâs not sure why the cat is assumed to be female.
âEveryone just always says âher.â She is always alone,â she said.
Sheâs been around awhile, it seems. Another local, Lynell Williams, managed to get some photos of the big cat from about 150 yards away, posting itâs ânot a bobcat.â
She also says a neighbor reportedly saw her with a cub and believes âshe has a den in this area.â
One Mountain Lion Report
A recent post on the Sweetwater County Rants and Raves Facebook page warns of a recent backyard spotting of âthe local female,â which the poster swears is a mountain lion.
Several others commented that they are familiar with the wildcat and warned folks to keep a close eye on their small pets.
Rock Springs authorities occasionally get reports of mountain lions in or near town, Animal Control Officer Lydia Gomez told Cowboy State Daily.
Thereâs been only one such report recently, she said.
âWe got a call about a week and a half ago, but nothing additional since then,â she said.
That mountain lion was reported behind somebodyâs house in the White Mountain area on the edge of town. It was reportedly walking along and not threatening anybody.
âWe went out and patrolled that area and tried to find it, but we couldnât,â Gomez said, adding that there have been no recent reports of bobcats on the loose made to Rock Springs Animal Control.
Reports to the local Wyoming Game and Fish Department have also been sparse.
âWe had one unverified report on July 13 behind Bellview Drive in Rock Springs,â Game and Fish Green River Region spokeswoman Regina Dickson told Cowboy State Daily.
Game and Fish recommends taking precautions in towns near mountain lion habitat, including keeping a close eye on pets and small children, and making sure yards are well-lit.
And if you run into an urban mountain lion, Game and Fish recommends playing it cool.
âIf you encounter a lion, talk in a calm and firm manner. Move away slowly. Make yourself look bigger by raising your arms. Don't run. Sudden movement may stimulate a lion's instinct to attack,â the agency states in its mountain lion safety tips.

Observe And Report Only
A mountain lion in town is hardly unheard of in Sweetwater County, said Gomez, who previously worked as an animal control officer in the neighboring community of Green River.
âA few years ago in Green River, we had a mountain lion walk right through town and everybody freaked out,â Gomez said. âBut we never saw it again after that.â
As officers did when the mountain lion was reported near White Mountain, animal control will respond when a big cat is reported in or near town.
However, if they track it down, animal control wonât try to catch it. Thatâs a job for Game And Fish, she said.
âWe canât really go out and throw a catch pole loop around mountain lion like we would with a dog,â Gomez said.
So, animal control officers will keep an eye on a mountain lion until game wardens can show up.
Game and Fish wardens typically tranquilize mountain lions, load them into cages and take them to remote locations to be released back into the wild.
That was the case with a mountain lion found lurking in a Laramie residentâs backyard last summer.
Just Leave Her Alone
If the big cat rumored to live in Rock Springs has eluded authorities so far, itâs probably because many residents donât want her caught and relocated, Fleck said.
As far as Fleck and many others are concerned, the mountain lion (or bobcat) has earned its place in the community and has stayed out of trouble.
âUs old-timers love Wyoming and she is part of it,â Fleck said. â(We) just feel like people should mind their own business and leave her be.â
She added that the wildcat also scares coyotes away, which she appreciates.
âNow, them coyotes are bad, they need to go,â Fleck said.
A Batty Year
Gomez agreed that coyotes must be kept out of town.
And while she and her staff leave mountain lions and bobcats up to Game and Fish, they do catch some smaller wild critters.
Those include rattlesnakes, skunks, raccoons, bats and even urban badgers.
âWe do get some badger calls,â Gomez said. âThose are my favorite, because theyâre sort of adrenaline-producing. Badgers arenât afraid of anything.â
But so far, 2024 has been mostly batty around Rock Springs.
âItâs been a bad bat year,â she said. âWeâve gotten more bat calls than anything else.â
Animal control prefers to capture wild animals alive and set them free in remote locations, Gomez said. But if an animal is suspected to have a transmissible disease such as rabies, it must be euthanized so the carcass can be tested.
In the meantime, Fleck and others who want the mysterious Rock Springs wildcat to stick around, they advise that if you see her, resist the urge to tell everybody.
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.