
Image: Male (left) and Female (right) Mountain LIons 1,” effected from “Puma concolor,” by Julian Welbrock on Flicker … https://www.pinterest.com/pin/351912451721014/ … , CC-BY-NC-SA 2.0 ..
Image: Male (left) and Female (right) Mountain LIons 1,” effected from “Puma concolor,” by Julian Welbrock on Flicker … https://www.pinterest.com/pin/351912451721014/ … , CC-BY-NC-SA 2.0 ..
- INTRODUCTION
- Timestamps
- VIDEO BY ALICE
- SUMMARY OF THE VIDEO
- VIDEO CREDITS
- IMAGE CREDITS
INTRODUCTION
Dear Ones,
This video has stories about recent Mountain Lion predations on human beings in the Santa Monica Mountains.
Chilling though these tales may be, it is important to note that they have to do with telepathy and the astral plane. They have yet to be proven through real life revelations.
Just in case, for the time being, please exercise great care while hiking in the Santa Monica Mountains.
There is a Summary after the video …
Timestamps
00:00 Introduction
01:18 Paramount Ranch – Camper Killed by Mountain Lions?
03:25 Hawk says: Fear Fear Fear Fear
04:09 Mountain Lion: She looks quite tasty!
04:21 Have Mountain Lions have been raiding walkers on the access road?
04:37 Story of Two White Dogs and a Lady Who Disappeared
05:10 Mountain Lion Explains: That’s Woman. Good for eating!
05:43 Have the Mountain Lions killed all the Deer?
06:46 Story of the Mother Whose Baby Was Lost
07:29 Let’s break the code of silence
08:21 Reagan Ranch – Are the Horseback riders safe?
08:34 Rocky Oaks Loop Trail – Too Many Mountain Lions!
09:52 Psychology of the Hunt and the Kill
11:07 My Friends Say: “Steer Clear of Danger!”
12:13 It May Be Older Mountain Lions That Are Here Now
12:41 Zuma Ridge Motorway
13:43 A Story for the Songbirds: No More Deer Elsewhere, and a Human Baby Grabbed
14:40 If the Hawk says ‘Fear’, Alice will get out of here!
15:18 Mountain Lions Have Learned to Open Car Doors?
16:49 Songbird re Mountain Lions: To Hear Is to Obey!
17:15 Backbone Trail Access at Encinal Canyon Road
18:15 Story: Listen to the Birds and Leave Quickly When They Fall Silent!
19:07 Backbone Trail Access South of Encinal Canyon Road
19:30 Cars Left at Trailhead Might Point to Mountain Lion Kills?
20:30 Red Tailed Hawks Are Circling
20:52 Hummingbird Lays It on the Line
21:14 On Scaring Mountain Lions Away by Speaking in a Very Low Voice
21:39 Do Mountain Lions Attack People Whle They Are Driving?
22:14 Can Mountain Lions and Songbirds Count to Seven?
23:01 Are the Mountain Lions at the Beach?
23:33 Is the Mountain Lion Male of Female? Young or Old?
23:49 North of Charmlee Wilderness Park – Mountain Lion Attack on a Woman
24:57 Charmlee Wilderness Park
25:36 South of Charmlee Wilderness Park – Don’t stop here!
26.08 Encinal Canyon Road at Avenida de la Encinal
27:21 Pacific Coast Highway – What the Dog Said About the Mountain Lions
27:52 What Are the Mountain Lions Eating at the Beach?
28:57 Story for the Songbirds: How the Mountain Lions Were Creeping Up
30:03 Telepathic Conversation About a Mountain Lion Leaping on Someone’s Roof
31:37 Near El Pescador State Beach – Camping Children Killed by Mountain Lions?
32:01 Stress Responses: Fight, Flight, Freeze, Faint, or Flop
32:21 Transparency is important to our Park System
32:55 Near Morning View Drive at Zuma Beach
33:23 Homeowners and Mountain Lions Warring for the Land?
33:58 Zuma Beach – Point Dume State Beach – A Musical Ground Squirrel
34:24 Conclusion
35:13 Video Credits and Image Credits
VIDEO BY ALICE
SUMMARY OF THE VIDEO
“What a Day! Mountain Lions Say They Are Everywhere!”
By Alice B. Clagett
Hello, Dear Ones. It’s Alice. I Am of the Stars.
INTRODUCTION
You know, prophecy is hard work. Lots of times prophecies are not what people want to hear. I had a series of prophecies one day a few weeks ago that were definitely not what I wanted to hear and definitely not what a lot of people wanted to hear.
So, I have to tell you, I put off publishing these until I had some good news last week about the same topic … the topic of how many Mountain Lions are in the Santa Monica Mountains and also what they’re up to with regard to predation on human beings.
So, here’s the bad news, but just to let you know, it was mitigated by the good news that I put out last week. There’s still some concern that even though there may have been an exodus of some Mountain Lions from the Santa Monica Mountains,
it could be that other Mountain Lion areas will be too populated and those Mountain Lions will move into the areas that have less Mountain Lions in them. So, we should all be very much on guard still, I feel.
Paramount Ranch
Well, here I am at Paramount Ranch again. It looks like there’s no parking here because of construction right now. And I just thought before I left, I’d show you what I had in mind when I was talking about what I thought was a missing person over here who was camping out at night. I’ll show you.
Okay. Up here, see, there’s a storage shed. Then I saw this dumpster and the dumpster had in it a new mattress [that is now gone] and still here is a mattress cover and pillows and stuff.
And I thought it could be that the story that I heard had to do with some people who were using that as a camping place. And maybe they had to exit that place at night in order to go use a restroom. Maybe one person came out and never went back. That was what I thought. And then I thought maybe everybody got upset and then they left all this bedding here and just went away.
And now it looks like they they’ve [restricted the parking lot]. And I haven’t heard why, you know. So there is a Ranger Station here, but usually if you knock on the door, nothing happens. So if you don’t hear from me again about this, I knocked and nothing happened.
Alice to Songbirds: You guys. Is there any [Mountain Lion] right there?
Songbird [warning loudly]: THEY’RE STALK-ing PEO-ple!
Alice: They’re on the other side, right? Do they come jumping out?
Songbird [totally exasperated]: STUPID DEAR G-D WO-man! STU-pid Woman!
Alice: They come over to here? Okay. Okay. I’m not going that way.
Songbird [totally exasperated]: Very good! She’s not LIS-tening to me!
Alice: I’m going this way. Okay. Only two [Mountain Lions].
Songbird 1 [totally exasperated]: Ex-ACT-ly!
Alice:Hawk, You want to say that again? Fear, fear, fear, fear.
Songbird: He said Dear Dear Dear Dear, He’s here!
Songbird: Jesus Christ Bird [Hawk] just said, “Fear, Fear, Fear, Fear.” He’s NOT scaring you. He said that as a warning.
Alice: Hawk said, “Fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear.”
Okay, I got it.
Songbird: Jesus Christ Bird is REAL-ly WARN-ing you!
Songbird: Jesus Christ Bird tries to WARN you!
Alice: Thanks, Birds. I appreciate your help.
Alice: You guys are terrific. I don’t know where I’d be without you. Thank you so much. Thank you. Thanks to everybody.
Songbird [quite het up]: Jesus Christ Bird, please ex-PLAIN things. She REAL-ly doesn’t under-STAND what you’re SAY-ing.
Alice: Bye. Bye. See you later. Bye.
Songbird [het up]: Jesus Christ Bird, please tell her she should REAL-ly LEAVE RIGHT away!
. . . . .
Alice to Readers: And the Contact Station is closed. This is National Park Service. It’s always closed though.
. . . . .
Mountain Lion [quietly]: She looks quite tasty.
Songbird: She says she’s not supposted to be here.
[Another Songbird repeats this.]
Mountain Lion [more loudly]: She DOES-n’t know we’re here.
Alice to Readers: I’m not seeing anything.
Astral Story of Two White Dogs and a Lady
Alice to Readers: So what I’m getting subterraineanly on the ‘hocus pocus’ plane is that right around here, nobody’s supposed to park. Nobody’s supposed to go anywhere because they’re [the Mountain Lions are] all massed over there, and they’re making … what do they call it? [forays!] … They’re raiding over here after the people get out of the cars, but that it’s okay to go down [the road] there.
But on the ‘hocus pocus’ plane, I heard that there was a lady down there was walking two white Dogs. Then one day, one white dog disappeared while she was walking. And the next day, the other white dog disappeared while she was walking.
And finally, the day came when she went for a walk, and she never came home to her husband. So, I don’t see how having the horse tours down that way is going to help the situation at all. But I’m going down there. We’ll see what happens.
. . . . .
Mother Mountain Lion [huffing, windy voice; speaking to Young Mountain Lions jocularly]: That’s WO-man. Good for EAT-ing.
Another Mountain Lion disguises this communication by saying to Alice: Oh! You’re so beautiful! [Trickster!]
Nanday: DO NOT EAT those Women!
Nanday:That BAS-tard MOUNTAIN Lion
[melding this word with the word ‘BAS-tard’] said that thing.
Don’t Go Down by the Creek!
Alice to Readers: I asked particularly if I could go down towards the water over there, and what I heard on the ‘hocus pocus’ plane was, “That’s a wrong place to be down there.”
The Bird said, “There’s a very bad being down there.”
You remember I took that path down there not too long ago and I took a picture down that way, and now I can’t go down there anymore.
Have the Mountain Lions killed all the Deer? Are they after People and Dogs and Horses now?
So here you have .. see? … another orange sign. It says, ‘Detour Horse Access to Paramount Trails’. They used to always park right here in this parking lot, but now they say, I guess, [that] the horses have to go down that way. Maybe they can park here, but they have to go down that way.
Maybe they can’t leave any horses right here. Maybe the Mountain Lions have killed all of the Deer and now they’re after the Horses, too. And the Babies and the Dogs and the Ladies and the People who sleep here at night. That’s what I think.
I’m getting in the car because the birds have stopped talking. That’s a very bad sign.
[This is telepathic input to do with the astral or ‘hocus pocus’ plane.]
I got a lot of negative press right now. They said, “Just go away.” And not only that, but they said, “Don’t go over to that other ranch across the road either.”
I don’t know what to do. I’m going to the Beach.
Story of the Mother Whose Baby Was Lost
Yes. As to this lady whose baby was lost. the guy is still traumatized. On the ‘hocus pocus’ plane he said that the baby was only 4 months old, [and] in a baby carriage, and his mom was peramulating with it along that road, I guess … and there was nobody there with her. It was just them.
And [the story goes] that they [the Mountain Lions] caught the baby and went off … and all he ever found was its head. Gross out! Terrible situation! [Could this possibly be true?]
Let’s Break the Code of Silence!
The funny thing is that they won’t talk about it. They’re keeping it secret. They have a concern, I think, about lawsuits and so forth. [That’s if the story is true.]
Of course, lawsuits are a terrible idea [with regard] to the Park System, which is already greatly understaffed and underpaid. It’s a terrible idea.
We should all help the Park System out in this terrible catastrophe, I feel, and not create a threat for them so that they can be transparent about what’s going on and just let everybody know, so that we can steer clear, you know.
That’s what I think. I feel that to be true. I hope they’ll take that into consideration.
Reagan Ranch – Are the Horseback riders safe?
Hey, look! [The horseback riders are] parking over here at Reagan Ranch. I’ll ask them. We’ll see what the story is, because it used to be [that they parked] over there at Paramount Ranch.
[I had a concern that the Mountain Lions might attack the riders or their Horses on the trail. I chickened out on talking with them.]
Rocky Oaks Loop Trail – Too Many Mountain Lions!
Alice to Readers: So, you guys know about this place, right? I dare not get [too far out of the car].
First, there’s two Mountain Lions, three Mountain Lions over here.
Mountain Lion [complacently]: ROAR, Alice.
Alice to Readers [continuing]: I’ll just take a look there.
Over this way, there was an older female Mountain Lion [who was] right in the intersection between Mulholland and Kanan. Not there, but near there. And she was saying she wished I didn’t know she were there. And over here was another Mountain Lion, an older Mountain Lion that was just waiting.
It said, “There’s a woman there [referring to me].”
And so I said, “Are you nearby?”
And it said, “No.” And then it intimated that it might not be telling the truth.
And there’s another one over here.
Alice to Mountain Lion: How old are you?
Songbird: FIVE YEAR-R-R-RS.
Mountain Lion [simultaneously]: Five Years of age [sounds younger].
The other one [is] over here. Maybe not.
Mountain Lion: I AM over here.
So I’m saying, Don’t go to Rocky Oaks Trail right now. Okay? Take my word for it. Don’t use a restroom there.
Psychology of the Hunt and the Kill
So here I am still over here at Rocky Oaks, and I was just explaining to someone … actually, I was speaking, but they were hearing me on the telepathic plane … I was explaining about what seemed to me to be the psychology of the the hunt and the kill for the Mountain Lions here in the Santa Monica Mountains.
And what I have to say is that it’s the same amount of energy that the Mountain Lion pack expends whether or not it makes a kill. If it intends to make the strike and the victim gets away, it’s the same amount of energy almost as if they actually grabbed the person and then killed the person.
And they don’t get anything to eat if they don’t make the kill. So, they’ve expended energy in a survival situation.
And in addition, that person that escapes might go and tell other people about their near encounter. And then everyone would be warned off from the hunting ground of the Mountain Lion pack that’s right here at Rocky Oaks. You see?
So the Mountain Lion, in reply to my long harangue, was saying, “Yes, in a survival economy, you have to be certain of your timing.” So now you know.
My Friends Say: “Steer Clear of Danger!”
And that is why I got a comment from someone that I know for getting out of the car when he told me that the Mountain Lion was just down in the draw where the tree was rooted on the other side of the restrooms.
And I was explaining that they wait till the exact moment, you know? Probably the moment when I was about to enter the restroom would be the moment because my back would be turned. I would be entering the restroom and they could grab me.
But they wouldn’t strike when I was right near my car because there was that extra length of space that they had to traverse, and it was more in the open and not so close to the draw where they could pull the kill down.
I don’t think my friends care about that about strategy. They just care about me staying away from areas like this.
But I’m telling you that if you want to take photographs and warn people about it, you kind of have to get out of your car and show your terrain to them. [That] is all.
But you should be extra extra specially cautious,
It May Be Older Mountain Lions That Are Here Now
These old ones … probably it’s easier pickings here, and so they can survive here. But they can’t fight off the young ones who are stronger. And so they have to be in a more populated area (which [offers] a greater risk for them of being detected). That’s what I think. They’ve been ostracized from the great mountain spaces to this place here.
Encinal Canyon Road just south of Zuma Ridge Motorway
I just talked to a Bird, a Songbird. It said there are four of them [four Mountain Lions] in this area. You remember this area here? Right past the work camp and the road that goes up the hill to Buzzard’s Roost? That’s the road there [shows the road] that goes up the hill.
Very informative Songbird says, “Don’t say what it is, but there are four of them in this area.”
Alice: What is it? Don’t say what?
Mountain Lion: Don’t talk abut the Mountain Lion.
Songbird: NEVER will I talk about the Mountain Lion.
Alice: Uh uh? Okay, I agree … Uh uh.
Mountain Lion [good-humoredly]: By the way, one of us
grabbed one of those hikers and it took nine days to eat it.
Nine days to eat it. And by that time it was really
very ROT-ten. Yes it was … very rotten.
Alice to Readers: Do you get it?
Mountain Lion [in a huffing voice, repeating my thoughts]: She says, “I see. They ARE eating people. They ARE grabbing people in the mountains. I guess I’d better move away from these horrible mountains right now.”
Alice to Songbirds: Are they [the Mountain Lions] down there?
They’re uphill? Are they grabbing the hikers?
They’re grabbing the hikers on the path?
Songbird to Alice: Yep, yep, yep. They ARE grabbing them.
[In the background, in a huffing, windy voice, the Mountain Lion is sleepily and happily repeating the story about how the hiker was caught and feasted upon for nine days.]
Alice to Songbirds: Are they grabbing the Deer here? The Deer here! There’s still some Deer here.
Songbird to Alice: He says there are no Deer here.
A Story for the Songbirds: No More Deer Elsewhere, and a Human Baby Grabbed
Alice to Songbirds: Down that way, all the Deer are eaten up.
Mountain Lion [dreamily] to Alice: D-mn right. They’ve [the Deer have] been eaten up.
Alice to Songbirds (continuing): They’re [the Mountain Lions are] grabbing some human Babies. [That’s] at Paramount Ranch. Paramount Ranch.
Alice to the Songbirds: Thanks for your intel. Thanks very much for your information and news.
Songbird to other Songbirds: She’s leaving.
Alice to the Songbirds: Thank you, dudes.
Songbird: We thank you.
Alice: Bless you.
Songbird: Fear fear is a mutual kind of thing.
Hawk [a piercing cry]: Fear. Fear.
Alice: Fear. Fear. Right.
Alice to the Songbirds: I won’t BE here as soon as I hear,
“Fear, Fear …” I agree. Did you hear anything?
Songbird: I did not.
Alice: I’m going to go anyway, okay?
Songbird: Okay.
Alice: It’s real spooky here right now.
Songbird: Yep yep yep yep yep yep yep.
Alice: I got it. The Hawk says, “Fear, fear, fear, fear,
fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear.” And I got to get out of here!
Mountain Lion [grumbling]: You really make me angry when you say things like that.
Scrub Jay: Yep yep yep yep yep yep yep yep yep.
If the Hawk says ‘Fear’, Alice will get out of here!
I’m going to go anyway, okay? It’s real spooky here right now. I got it. The Hawk says, “Fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear, fear.” And I got to get out of here!
Scrub Jay: Yep yep yep yep yep yep yep yep yep.
Alice to Readers: So, I was talking to the Songbird up on the hill just now, and we were talking about how the Hawk could warn about Mountain Lion attacks, you know, [shhh … quiet!] Mountain Lion attacks.
And I said, “I got it. Thank you very much, about listening for the Hawks.”
And then I said, “If the Hawk says, ‘Fear’, Alice will get out of here.”
And they thought that was so funny. They just went on about it and they started laughing.
“Fear, fear, fear, fear. Alice will get out of here.”
Mountain Lions Have Learned to Open Car Doors?
Did I ever just get the important news from this very interesting Bird up here! Right.
Alice to Songbirds: What kind of Bird is it?
Kestrel? A Kestrel!
Alice to Readers: It’s very feisty Kestrel.
Songbird says that Kestral says: You are very SER-ious.
I asked it if the Mountain Lions know how to get into cars, and it said, “Yes. They open the cars right up now.” So I asked it visually, you know, clairvoyantly, if they know how to put their claw around the car door and open it up if it’s partly open? And it said, “Yes.”
Alice to Kestrel: Can they get in the roof? … Not in the roof?
Kestrel: No. They can’t get in the roof.
Alice to Kestrel: They can reach in if the window’s down?
Kestrel: Yes.
Alice to Kestrel: Yes?
Kestrel: Yes.
Alice to Readers: Yes. What …
Alice to Readers: Okay. So, that Songbird over there that’s very quiet said … You can’t hear it [You can’t hear those Songbirds]. They’re so quiet …
It said, “Then they reach in the window and pull ‘it’ out. First they strike with their claw if the window’s open. Then they reach in the window and pull ‘it’ out.”
Alice to Songbirds: Thanks. You guys stay safe, okay?
Songbird re Mountain Lions: To Hear Is to Obey!
I was getting right ready to leave this place and I heard a baritone voice of a Mountain Lion, a male Mountain Lion just in the flower of manhood. And it said, “You guys, Don’t give all our secrets up!”
To hear (I’d say) is to obey amongst the Songbirds … and [that applies to] me too. Well, kind of …
Mountain Lion [slurring its words}: COME OVER HERE NOW!
Alice to Mountain Lion: QUIT that!
Backbone Trail Access at Encinal Canyon Road
Mountain Lion to Alice [in a huffing voice]: What’s your name? … Dharm Darshan Kaur, you are in Mountain Lion territory, and you need to get out of here right away …
Alice to Readers: So I was just going through the draw in the mountains to get to this place where that club was that closed after the big fire years ago and hasn’t reopened.
[I am speaking of Encinal Canyon Road at Clubhouse Drive.]
Mountain Lion [continuing]: You need to get out of this country. There are Mountain Lions ALL OVER the mountains right here, and they eat people all the time.
Alice to Readers [continuing]: And on the other side of the road I heard a male Mountain Lion say there are four Mountain Lions in every area of this mountain.
Alice to Readers [continuing]: And I was just coming to this place. [This place where I am now is known as Backbone Trail Access at Encinal Canyon Road.] You may remember this place as a place where …
Mountain Lion to Alice: You are in a Mountain Lion area.
Songbird chirps a warning chirp for Alice.
Mountain Lion [continuing]: You must GO AWAY RIGHT NOW.
Songbird to Alice [loudly, nearby]: Stop! Stop! Stop! … Stop! Stop! Stop!
Alice to Songbirds: Okay, they already caught something. Did they get as much as they need right now, do you think?
Mountain Lion to Alice: We got a lot, but we don’t have to tell anybody.
Alice to Songbirds [continuing]: Or they’re waiting for something to eat?
Alice to Readers: That’s the Bird telling me.
Alice to Songbirds: You’re not sure? Okay.
Mountain Lion: Why did I tell her that I got a lot? … I got it!
[Alice: Got what, I wonder?]
Story: Listen to the Birds and Leave Quickly When They Fall Silent!
This is the place that I filmed the video about when I first really found out how dangerous the Mountain Lions were. I was going up this trail … coming back down this trail, really. [I’ll] see if I can find it. Yeah, that trail [shows trailhead].
I was coming back down and this big Bird kept going berserk telling me how dangerous everything was. And it turned out later that there were three or four Mountain Lions tracking me, a female and some young ones right then, and closing in on me. And that caused the Bird to go berserk.
When Birds go crazy like that … and in your face … and keep following you and yelling at you, it’s really an important sign to stay away or to go away as soon as possible. Anyway, this is that place.
Backbone Trail Access South of Encinal Canyon Road
On the other side of the road just up by that telephone pole is the trailhead [for the trail] that goes down to the place where I filmed the Lion Song. [That is Backbone Trail Access south of Encinal Canyon Road.]
I expect that’s crawling with [Mountain] Lions now because that’s a riparian area and they would really like the water and the prey that are attracted to drink down there. Down that way [zooms in] you go down.
Cars Left at Trailhead Might Point to Mountain Lion Kills?
Alice to Readers: Let’s see. There’s hardly any cars
here. I wonder if you could tell by looking at the cars that are left at the trailheads here at the Backbone Trail of the Santa Monica Mountains, …
Mountain Lion [in a gruff, low voice, speaking simultaneously with me] to Songbird: Songbird, I am getting very angry.
Songbird: Yep!
Alice to Readers [continuing]: … every week or so … you know, derelict cars that are left here? … Maybe you could tell how many kills there have been that have otherwise gone unnoticed. That’s my thought. That’s just for the rangers and people like that who care about this, …
Mountain Lion to Songbirds: She knows Mountain Lion is here, but she cannot hear him. Would you tell this Woman she’s in very grave danger right now?
Alice to Readers: … the volunteers. [Shows location name on a sign.] So, this is the Backbone Trail at Encinal Canyon Trailhead.
Mountain Lion to Songbird [speaking simultaneously with me]: I am very angry and I and the other Mountain Lion will be creeping up and we may eat her all up.
Songbird 1 to Songbird 2: You should say, ‘Eat up’.
Songbird 2 to Alice: EAT her all up!
Alice to Songbird: Did you see something?
Mountain Lion: YEP! Eat her up, he said.
Alice to Songbird: What?
Songbird 1: She can’t hear ‘Eat up’.
Songbird 2: Seven of them EAT YOU ALL UP.
Alice to Readers: Seven of them closing in! I’m going to go. Alice to Songbirds: Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, Bird. I’m so grateful.
Songbird 1 to Songbird 2: She says she’s grateful!
Mountain Lion to Songbird: I thank you too.
Alice to herself: Seven. [Songbird] can count to seven. I didn’t know. I could barely count to seven myself. I’m just leaving.
Red Tailed Hawks Are Circling
Uh, You’ll see up there … Vultures circling [above] the top [of the mountain] there. I would look up there for remains of whatever it is that they’re circling after.
No, those are Hawks, right? Yeah, Hawks. Never mind. It looks like Red Tailed Hawk. I’m so sorry.
TURN AUDIO UP – Hummingbird Lays It on the Line
Hummingbird to Alice: That Mountain Lion will eat you guys all up.
He said he will eat you up. Yes, he did. He did say he would do that.
Alice [repeating the Hummingbird]: Eat you guys all up?
Hummingbird: Yes, he would!
Alice to Readers: A car was just going by, and a little bit older male Mountain Lion from over here joined in its voice with the roar of the car and said, “Eat you guys all up.”
On Scaring Mountain Lions Away by Speaking in a Very Low Voice
And just a little earlier, I was talking to a female Mountain Lion with a sweet voice. I said, “How old are you?” And she said, “One year old.” And I said, “Oh! Strong, fierce Lioness.” And because I spoke in a low voice, she said, “I’m just going away right now.”
Do Mountain Lions Attack People Whle They Are Driving?
As I entered the parking lot here at Encinal Canyon Trailhead for the Backbone Trail for the Santa Monica Mountains, on the other side of the road there was another Lioness. Couldn’t see it, right? But I asked it … because I had my window open.
I said, “Do the Mountain Lions ever attack the people in the cars with the windows down as the cars are driving?”
And she said, “No, not while driving. We wait until you stop in the parking lot.”
So, here I am in the parking lot.
Can Mountain Lions and Songbirds Count to Seven?
Oh, one more update from the parking lot here. I was just asking the Songbirds from inside the car: “I didn’t know you could [count] to seven!” The Songbirds didn’t answer.
And then the a Mountain Lion lady over that way closer to the restrooms … she was in a kind of a jocular mood, a jesting mood, and she pretended she was the Songbird replying, and she said, “We heard that from someone else.”
And I said, “Who’d you hear it from?”
And she said she would rather not say.
Are the Mountain Lions at the Beach?
Since the Mountain Lions are so talkative hereabouts, before I left the parking lot I asked … since I was thinking of going down to the Beach … I said are there Mountain Lions down at the Beach (because I don’t want to assume too much).
And that very same jesting female Mountain Lion, maybe 3 years of age, said, “Not in the daytime, Alice, but at night we go down to the Beach.” So that’s something to keep in mind.
Is the Mountain Lion Male of Female? Young or Old?
And I noticed another thing: All the Mountain Lions hereabouts have different ways of speaking. So you can tell one from the other and whether they’re male or female, and pretty much how old they are, just by listening to their voices.
North of Charmlee Wilderness Park – Mountain Lion Attack on a Woman
Well, I was just going along the road here and I [asked the Songbirds] up the hill.
There was a house … I can’t say exactly where. And I asked how it was going up there, because they’re very exposed to the wilderness up there.
And I heard a male voice that said, “A ghastly thing happened here.”
And I said, “What was that?” And he said, “My wife got bit by a Mountain Lion.”
And I said, “What happened then?” and he said, “She can’t walk anymore.”
And then a lady’s voice came in and said, “We did kill the Mountain Lion, but he did destroy my ‘antibular cortex’.I have no idea what that is. I probably got it wrong.
[I looked it up. It’s ‘mandibular cortex’ … the lower jaw.]
So that’s this story here. Are we [ever] running into a ton of stories today!
. . . . .
I thought I’d go to this next place where I used to walk … which seems impossible now … and if there’s not too many people there, I’m going to play some Viking music for the Mountain Lions and see if anybody shows up. So, we’ll see what happens.
Charmlee Wilderness Park
Here we are … Charmlee Wilderness Park. We’ll see what gives. Here I heard a Mountain Lion muttering … a male, a little older. It said, “For the first time I got what’s going on.”
It got my name … grabbed my name and said, “Alice Clagett doesn’t know half of what is going on.” There’s a bunch of cars here. I don’t think [playing the Viking music] will work because of so many cars.
South of Charmlee Wilderness Park – Don’t stop here!
Yeah. All along this brief stretch of ground past Charmlee, I had my window down and the Birds were warning me to stay away from here.
Here where this house is over here, the Songbirds pointed [and said] the Mountain Lions are all over there and down there [to both sides of the road].
They said, “Don’t stop here.”
I believe them. You may not believe them, but you might be not be counted amongst the survivors if you fail to believe.
Encinal Canyon Road at Avenida de la Encinal (near Encinal Beach)
Well, here I am. There’s a view of the Pacific and that [street] might be Rancho de … Darn it, I can’t see [the street sign]. Sorry. I don’t know.
Songbird to Alice: Rancho de la Encinal, Dharm Dee.
We think that’s Rancho de la Encinal. We know that road.
Alice to Readers: There’s a road there. A private road probably.
Alice to Readers [continuing]: No, maybe not. I was talking to the Birds here
because that’s my source of information.
[The Songbirds here have amazingly good verbal skills.]
I said, “How’s it going, dudes?
Songbird said: “Very good. Thank you very much.”
Alice: “How’s the Mountain Lions here?”
Songbird 1: She says, “Don’t SAY ‘Mountain Lions’. You’ll at-TRACT them.”
Songbird 2: The Birdies Birdies Birdies will agree on that one.
Alice to Readers: And they [the Songbirds] said, “Good.” They said, “Six here.”
And then there was kind of hysterical laughter over there.
Songbird to Alice: Right. There WAS that.
Alice to Songbirds: Over there?
Alice to herself: There’s only three here.
Alice to Readers: And then they said, “Don’t use those words.
That’ll attract the Mountain Lions.”
Whoops. They didn’t say that. [They said,] “Don’t talk about the Mountain Lions.”
Alice to Songbirds: They said that’ll attract them over here? Who said that? Not over there … down this way!
Alice to Songbirds: Thank you. Thank you, Birds. You’re lifesavers, truly. Thank you so much. I’m very very grateful.
Alice to Readers: Got to go. Going to go down by the ocean and see whether there’s any Mountain Lions down there.”
What the Pacific Coast Highway Dog Said About the Mountain Lions
I was just talking to a human’s Dog down there. It said there are no Mountain Lions down at the Beach. And I said … since I’m ever interested in keeping the Dogs informed, just as they are interested in helping me out with their great way of smelling things from afar …
I said, “I heard from a male Mountain Lion that they are down there, but at night.” And the Dog said, “That’ll explain those half-eaten people down there.”
What Are the Mountain Lions Eating at the Beach?
And there was one other thing that went on. What was that about? I forget.
[There are more very verbally skilled Songbirds here. They are using a uniquely endearing pattern of speech repetition by threes, as you will see.]
Songbird to Alice: You forget get get? I forget get too. By the way, it was the PEO-ple who said that about the Mountain Lions.
Alice repeats what Songbirds are saying: “The people said that the Mountain …?”
Alice to Readers: So it wasn’t a dog [that said it]?
Alice to Readers [continuing]: It was the people that said that.
Mountain Lion roars with the car sound: I am ROAR-ing, Dharm Dee.
Songbird and Dog to Alice: It was about what they eat. Yep, yep!
Mountain Lion [along with car sound]: ROAR-R-RING.
Alice to Readers: Oh yeah. So I was talking to the Birds after that
and I said, “What are the Mountain Lions doing down there?”
Alice to Readers [continuing]: What do they eat down there?” And they said …
One of them said, “Mussels!” … and the other one said, “Anything at all!”
Both are probably true.
Alice to Songbirds: “Are they eating people too?
Songbird 1 to Alice: It could could could could could be true.
Songbird 2: It MIGHT be true.
Songbird 3: They they they might eat any any any thing they can.
Songbird 4: Right right right. They’re eating any any any thing.
Alice to Readers: That Bird just said apparently …
Alice to Readers [continued]: … they were eating everything they can?
Alice to Songbirds: “Are they really hungry?”
Songbird 1 to Alice:Yeah, they’re VER-y hungry.
Songbird 2: They’re Great Big things.
Story for the Songbirds: How the Mountain Lions Were Creeping Up
Alice to Songbirds: I heard at one place that I visited … that was at Encinal Canyon, you know … ‘Los Leones’, where I did the “Lion Song,” right around that area … First the Birds said, “Don’t worry, they [the Mountain Lions] had something to eat right now.” And I said, “Are you completely sure that they’re not hungry at all?”
And then they stopped and listened and they said, “Well, some were creeping up.”
Songbird: Thank you for telling that story! CREEP-ing up? Dear Dear dear dear dear!
Alice to Songbirds: So, I don’t know if they wanted to eat or if they just were curious, but [I felt it was] time to leave, you know? Humans aren’t quick. They can’t fly like Birds.
Songbird: Jeepers!
Alice: I know!
Alice to Readers: I’m sorry I can’t get all the Bird conversation in here. See, there’s traffic that’s making a noise. Then there’s Mountain Lions roaring here and there. And then the Birds are talking, but quite naturally, because of the dire situation in which we find ourselves, they’re speaking in a quite a subdued manner.
Songbird to Alice: Right, right, right.
Alice to Songbirds: Dudes, I’m going to go on. Okay. No Mountain Lions up there? … or down there.
[Songbirds say, and I repeat,] “Down there [nearer the Beach].”
Alice to herself: Okay. Got it.
Telepathic Conversation About a Mountain Lion Leaping on Someone’s Roof
So, I was coming down the mountain a little while back and I saw a house on the slope over this way and I talked to the owner there.
I said, “You all know what the score is, don’t you?” And he said, “Yeah, Go inside and keep all the doors locked.”
And then he and I were both thinking maybe he could go up on top of the roof and it would be okay. And then he and I both saw a vision of a Mountain Lion leaping silently up onto the roof, right?
And then he imagined that he had a moving platform that went down from the roof into the attic of the house and glass doors that closed together above it.
And then we both imagined the 5 inch [really just 2 inches max] claws of the Mountain Lion … one of them grabbed hold of the the two doors so they couldn’t completely close.
And then the guy behind me in a fancy car … he may have been a movie producer … visualized that the the Mountain Lion was moving its claw back and forth like that [shows motion] and got two more claws in there. Totally Hollywood, isn’t it?
And so then I tried hysterical laughter. It seemed to help a lot. And he thought that was pretty funny. And that’s what the Songbirds have been doing when they’re close to the Mountain Lions and I talk to them … kind of a hysterical titter. But it helps, you know; it releases tension. That’s what I think.
Near El Pescador State Beach – Camping Children Killed by Mountain Lions?
I’m on PCH [Pacific Coast Highway] now and I heard a kindly man on the ‘hocus pocus’ plane, the astral plane. He said, “Uh, I’m all right. They just got some children of mine, that’s all.”
I said, “Oh, what happened?”
He said, “They were camping out and they got them.”
Stress Responses: Fight, Flight, Freeze, Faint, or Flop
Now, most people when it comes to post-traumatic stress, they pick fainting or flopping instead of fighting or flying away. Those are the most popular responses, you know? It’s important to pick the right response.
Transparency is important to our Park System
And if we want to keep our National Parks, we have to let people know. That’s what I think … because the longer you wait, the greater the lawsuit. I can see it now.
We don’t want our National Parks to be closed. We don’t want the Santa Monica Mountains to be closed.
We have to let people know. That’s a fact. We have to tell people so they can stay out of the way and not get involved in this carnage.
You heard my words, but we don’t know if it’s true or not until somebody speaks up and speaks the truth.
Near Morning View Drive at Zuma Beach
I just passed Morning View on PCH. I’m on on my way south to Point Dume. The Beach is over here … the other beach [Zuma Beach]. And I heard two young Mountain Lions, a female and a male, maybe two years old each. They’re inhabiting [the area] over that way [on the landward side of the road].
I see that they come down the draws at night to the Beach. They can get through the same way that the pedestrians can get through.
Homeowners and Mountain Lions Warring for the Land?
I was talking to the male who was over by Morning View. He said, “A homeowner killed one of them last week.” I said to the male, it’s a war for the territory here, huh? Warring for the land.” And he said, “Yes.”
So the people and the Mountain Lions are warring. The Mountain Lions are roaring, but the people and the Mountain Lions are warring for the land here. This is Malibu, I think. Very northernmost part.
Zuma Beach – Point Dume State Beach – A Musical Ground Squirrel
I saw two young Ground Squirrels down by the water over there. I was fording a small creek and I said to one of them, I said, “Hey, little guy, be safe, okay?” And in a musical voice, the young Ground Squirrel said, “I am safe. Thank you very much.” Like that, musically. He’s going to be a great musician one day.
Conclusion
Just as a reminder, just last week I offered a video that suggests that in certain areas of the Santa Monica Mountains, there’s been less Mountain Lions and also there may have been an exodus of some Mountain Lions to the north … north of the Santa Monica Mountains into the far ranges of California. And so the news that you see in this video has been mitigated by that new news update.
God bless you all,
And keep you safe,
And be with you
Through all your days.
In love, light and joy,
This is Alice B. Clagett.
I Am of the Stars … and so are you.
Filmed on 27 March 2026 and published on 18 April 2026; youtube transcripts edited and timestamps added on 20 April 2026
Come and visit me at “Awakening with Planet Earth” … https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com … See you there.
VIDEO CREDITS
“What a Day! Mountain Lions Say They Are Everywhere!”
By Alice B. Clagett
Filmed on 27 March 2026
Produced on 18 April 2026
Location: Santa Monica Mountains, CA
CC BY-SA 4.0 International
IMAGE CREDITS
Image: “Parousia – Presence,” adapted from Image by Roger Casco from Pixabay – Pixabay Content

Image: “Self-Portrait 2,” by Alice B. Clagett, 27 March 2026, CC BY-SA 4.0 International, from “Awakening with Planet Earth,” https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com ..
Image: “Self-Portrait 2,” by Alice B. Clagett, 27 March 2026, CC BY-SA 4.0 International, from “Awakening with Planet Earth,” https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com ..
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0). Attribution: By Alice B. Clagett.
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prophecy, Mountain Lions, Songbirds, mammals, birds, hummingbirds, interspecies communication, survival, ground squirrels, Santa Monica Mountains, hiking, falcons, kestrels,
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