A young shorthaired Australian Shepherd is lucky to be alive after a mountain lion grabbed her by her head and tried to carry her away on her ownersâ rural property near Newcastle.Â
Shelley Williamson told Cowboy State Daily that she and her husband, Robert, were getting ready for church early Sunday when she heard a strange noise and looked out a second-story window into the driveway.
At first, she couldnât quite grasp what she was seeing.
âThen it dawned on me that she (her dog, Dottie) was lying next to a mountain lion, with her head in the mountain lionâs mouth,â she said.
She tried to make noise to frighten the mountain lion off, but it didnât work.
âIt didnât even flinch at the noise, I was banging on the window screen and hooting at the mountain lion,â she said.
The encounter ended with Dottie suffering only minor puncture wounds to the top of her head and the underside of her jaw, left by the big catâs teeth.Â
There were tense moments, especially when the mountain lion carried Dottie off, at which point Shelley was certain that her dog was doomed.

More Big Cats Than Ever
The Williamsons own about 40 acres in rugged, picturesque country near Oil Creek Road, in the vicinity of the local airport.
The area is rich with wildlife. There are both mule deer and white-tailed deer, and they enjoy hunting on a neighborâs property.Â
There are also bobcats, which Shelley enjoys watching.Â
Thereâs always been mountain lions now and again; lately theyâve been showing up more frequently.Â
Theyâve been spotted crossing the road and in a neighborâs driveway, and trail cameras have caught video and photos of them in various locations.
The Williamsons and some of their neighbors think a family of mountain lions might have moved in, perhaps a female with at least two subadult offspring.
Deer are a favorite prey of mountain lions, and a buck was recently killed on a neighboring property.
âThe mountain lions took down a white-tail, a pretty big buck. He (the neighbor) thought it had been poached, so he called Game and Fish to come look at it. They told him it had been taken down by a mountain lion,â Shelley said.
An increase in the mountain lion population around Newcastle makes sense, in light of a broader pattern of the big cats reclaiming more territory. Biologists say theyâve been pushing eastward, even into prairie habitat.Â

âOur Dog Is Goneâ
The Williamsons spend their winters in Arizona. They picked up Dottie there as a rescue, Shelley said. Dottie is about a year old now.
âSheâs pretty quick. She likes to chase and play tag with the domestic cat on our property,â Shelley said.
Dottie is also vigilant and usually barks at any sign of trouble.Â
âShe was really, really quiet that morning (of the attack). That lion must have snuck up on her,â Shelley said.
After she saw the mountain lion with Dottieâs head in its mouth, she and Robert both scrambled to retrieve firearms.Â
Robert went outside and tried to spook the mountain lion by honking one of their vehiclesâ horns.Â
That didnât work, but the cat was startled when he fired up the engine.
It got up and started moving away, with Dottie still in its mouth.
âShe was dangling, our dog wasnât even touching the ground,â Shelley said.
She couldnât get a clear shot with her pistol as the mountain lion moved off.
âI told Robert, âSheâs gone. The mountain lion took her down to the next plateau. Our dog is gone,ââ she said.
Though the situation seemed hopeless, Robert started driving the pickup to the lower section of the property.

Dottie EscapesÂ
Robert was on his way back up the driveway when Dottie made her presence known.
âWe heard her bark, and we knew she was still alive,â Shelley said.
âRobert spotted the lion by a boulder, still hanging onâ to Dottie, but the dogâs head was no longer in its mouth, she said.
Then Dottie managed to squirm out of the mountain lionâs grasp and made a run for the house.
âThe mountain lion returned to the house briefly, as if âit was still trying to look for the dog,â Shelley said.
It finally left, and they havenât seen it again since. They think itâs still around.Â
Occasionally, Dottie seems to catch a whiff of the big catâs scent, âand sheâll growl,â Shelley said.
Theyâre still not sure why the mountain lion didnât just bite down on Dottieâs skull or break her neck.
âMy husband said, âhe was almost playing with her, like a housecat plays with a mouse,ââ she said.
Calling In Houndsmen
Since the encounter with the mountain lion, Shelley said they donât let Dottie out alone and âanywhere weâre going now on the property, we have a gun in hand.â
Their grandchildren are no longer allowed to hike around the place without an adult, she added.
Shelley said sheâs connected with a local houndsman or a hunter who uses trained hounds to pursue mountain lions.
The Williamsons hope the hunters can at least convince the mountain lions to leave and seek new territory.Â
âThey going to go out to try chasing it on Friday, to see what they can do,â Shelley said.Â
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





