The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Florida wild cat sanctuary caught in hurricane’s path

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PANAMA CITY, Fla.,: ‘Saint’ the mountain lion was pacing nervously in his pen and crying days before Hurricane Michael cut a path of destructio­n through the Bear Creek Feline Centre, a refuge for 23 wild cats near Florida’s Panama City.

“They were very agitated,” said Bertie Broaddus, who runs the center with her husband Jim Broaddus, as she inspected the damage from the powerful storm that killed at least 17 people and tore up Florida’s Panhandle coastline.

“If they’d been in the wild they instinctiv­ely would have moved on,” said Jim.

“But when they’re in captivity they don’t have that option. So they hunker down, and then after it’s over, they’re agitated and traumatise­d just like the people.”

The endangered animals at the refuge – rescued African servals, jaguarundi, bobcats, Siberian lynx, mountain lions and panthers – were unharmed. The center sustained considerab­le damage and its main access road was blocked by fallen trees.

Bertie, a retired special education teacher, opened the centRE, about 15 miles north of downtown Panama City, with her husband in 2000. They live there and run the nonprofit with the help of a dozen volunteers.

As they inspected downed trees, a torn roof, collapsed garage and flattened fence around the perimeter, the couple’s main concern was how to care for the animals, whose daily food and medical costs are about US$600.

The centre is a TripAdviso­r Panama City top attraction and tours help cover its costs, but the hurricane has driven away visitors and access to the butcher shop that supplies meat for the animals has been impeded.

On Wednesday night, as Hurricane Michael raged through the area, Bertie said that she and her husband repeatedly checked on the cats outside.

“If I could have I would have evacuated, but I couldn’t leave the animals,” she said. “We had to hunker down and make sure they were OK for the safety of the community.”

She said neighbors were justifiabl­y concerned that some of the big cats might escape in the storm.

“We’re kind of worried about those cats getting out. There’s a lot of kids in this neighbourh­ood,” said Jonathon Roeder, 33, who lives with his family in Cedar Wood Estates, about two miles from the CentRE.

Neighbours and agents from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission checked on the centre after the storm. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Pope Paul VI and Archbishop Oscar Romero pictures are seen during a Mass for their canonisati­on at the Vatican. — Reuters photo
Pope Paul VI and Archbishop Oscar Romero pictures are seen during a Mass for their canonisati­on at the Vatican. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Jim Broaddus, director of the Bear Creek Feline Centre, leads volunteers through damage caused by Hurricane Michael at the Feline Centre in Panama City, Florida.
Jim Broaddus, director of the Bear Creek Feline Centre, leads volunteers through damage caused by Hurricane Michael at the Feline Centre in Panama City, Florida.
 ??  ?? Siberian lynx are fed in the aftermath of Hurricane Michael at the Bear Creek Feline Centre in Panama City. — Reuters photos
Siberian lynx are fed in the aftermath of Hurricane Michael at the Bear Creek Feline Centre in Panama City. — Reuters photos

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