- INTRODUCTION
- VIDEO BY ALICE
- SUMMARY OF THE VIDEO
- VIDEO CREDITS
- MORE INFORMATION
- Human Male Roars at Mountain Lion
- Mistakes of Diplomacy to Avoid When Being Stalked by a Cougar
- Sidebar: What the Mother Cougar Was Thinking
- Is That a Bobcat, Blynx, Lynx-Cat, or Lynx?
INTRODUCTION
Dear Ones,
It seems there is a wild animal that likes to roar like an automobile!
There is a Summary after the video …
VIDEO BY ALICE
SUMMARY OF THE VIDEO
What Being Likes the Roar of the Cars? Is It a Bobcat? Is It a Mountain Lion?
By Alice B. Clagett
Hello, Dear Ones, It’s Alice. I Am of the Stars.
Well, so I found out who it is that’s talking in that low, slow voice that sounds a little like the cars racing down the road. They got angry with me for not liking the cars, and I guess that means they like the cars or the sound of the cars … [Did I ever get this wrong!]
So first I thought: Maybe it’s a Bobcat because they go ‘ROAR-R_R!’ all the time. And the somewhat lugubrious (that means sad), low, slow voice of the being said, “Yes. That’s what I am.”
{Nix! It was a Coyote down below, next to the cars.]
So then I heard someone else say: That voice is a little too strong for a being like that. It must be a bigger being.
[This is another voice … not a Coyote’s voice … higher up on the Ridge Line.]
And so I said: Could that voice be the voice of a Mountain Lion?
And the voice said: Oh, no! They know who I am. Oh, good heavens, they know who I am.
I said: Don’t worry. I won’t hurt you. [Talk about lame!]
And the voice said: Thank you very much for putting this metal tag on my ear. Thank you very much indeed for that.
And someone else said … in the same kind of voice it said: Oh, So you don’t like having us track you around!
And that was the end of that story.
. . . . .
I met a hiker just now, and he said he was just talking to himself. That was just him. On the telepathic plane, he said that.
[I think the hiker might have been referring to that comment to the Mountain Lion, implying the Mountain Lion was using its hunting prowess to track Humans around, and why then should Humans not use ear tags to track Mountain Lions around? Tit for tat, right?]
And I said: I certainly hope that’s all that was.
[This is one of my early encounters with Predator Talk. In the Santa Monica Mountains, that would be Coyote, Bobcat, or Mountain Lion. As a Lightworker, I am not that well attuned to Predator Talk. I am still trying to figure out for certain which of these beings I am talking to. It is a top priority for me, but I am still not one hundred percent sure what Predator I am hearing.]
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 19 June 2024 and published on 4 July 2024; updated and transcribed and youtube transcription edited on 26 January 2026
My website is “Awakening with Planet Earth” … https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com ..
VIDEO CREDITS
“What Being Likes the Roar of the Cars? Is It a Bobcat? Is It a Mountain Lion?”
by Alice B. Clagett
Filmed on 19 June 2024 and produced on 4 July 2024
Location: Santa Monica Mountains, CA
CC BY-SA 4.0 International
MORE INFORMATION
Human Male Roars at Mountain Lion
Near the beginning of this video a Human Male roars at a Mountain Lion that is stalking him …
Video: “Viral video shows cougar stalking Utah hiker in terrifying 6-minute encounter – FULL VIDEO | ABC7,” by ABC7, 12 October 2020 … https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ktRhBcHza4 ..
Mistakes of Diplomacy to Avoid When Being Stalked by a Cougar
With reference to the above-cited video …
I note what looked like a Baby Cougar walking out onto the road at the beginning of the video.
I note the hiker’s repeated mention of the Baby Cougars and his mention of how scary the Mother Cougar is may have provoked that Cougar’s quite blingy intimidation display at timeframes 2:47 -2:58 and 3:20 – 3:24 and 4:13 – 4:18 ..
I note the hiker’s mention of his gun (which he apparently did not find) did not daunt the Mountain Lion.
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Sidebar: What the Mother Cougar Was Thinking
I note at timeframe 4:48 – 5:20 that the Human Male and the Mother Cougar said the following …
Human Male to Mother Cougar: Go get your babies! Go away! Oh! Damn.
Mother Cougar to herself (under her breath, simultaneously): Jesus Christ, it knows about my babies …
[Note non-gender-specific pronoun ‘it’, as if the Human Male were an animal whose gender is beneath the notice of the Cougar.]
Human Male to Mother Cougar: I just wanted to go on a run.
Mother Cougar to herself (under her breath): … and it might go back and murder them. What am I …
Human Male to Mother Cougar: Come on, Dude! Come on!
Mother Cougar to herself (under her breath): Oh, No! He wants me to attack him. Why is that? I’m not strong enough to attack him.
Human Male to Mother Cougar: Whoa!
Comments: We humans need to practice in order to produce intimidating Roars, I feel. Especially Human Women might want to perfect this technique.
I note several interspecies diplomatic mistakes on the part of the runner.
- Never mention a Mother Predator’s babies to her. That will cause her to continue stalking and maybe to attack.
- Never say anything ambiguous like “Come on, Dude! Come on!” You may not be intending to provoke an attack, but the Predator with whom you are talking may take your words literally.
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I note at timeframe 5:38 – 5:42 it looks like the hiker used cayenne pepper spray … I can hear the ‘hiss … hiss’ of the expelled spray; can you hear it too? The Mother Cougar immediately turned tail and fled. So cayenne pepper spray is a very good thing for a hiker to carry.
NOTE: There is more on the above-referenced video here …
Link: “What to Do When a Mountain Lion Stalks You – or When People Mob You – or When You are Gaslit,” by Alice B. Clagett, written and published on 20 November 2025 … https://wp.me/p2Rkym-EWq ..
Is That a Bobcat, Blynx, Lynx-Cat, or Lynx?
I did research on Bobcat roars, and found out there is confusion about whether this animal or that is a Bobcat or a Lynx. Here in the Santa Monica Mountains of California there are no Lynxes, so there is no confusion.
Google AI says that Bobcats roar, so there is that.
The below-referenced video is about Bobcats, but there is some discussion on the telepathic plane as to whether they may be Lynxes. Very good ‘ROAR’ sound, regardless …
Video: “What a Scary Scream from Bobcats!!!” by WNAnimals, 12 June 2024 … https://youtube.com/shorts/ZR2KFOrMQfU?si=BTWMXzC0xQWAQe2S ..
I took a look at the images and the territory map at this link, which proved helpful …
Link: “How to Tell the Difference Between a Canada Lynx and a Bobcat,” by Hal Brindley, 19 January 2014, updated 26 March 2023 … https://www.travel4wildlife.com/tell-difference-between-canadian-lynx-bobcat/ ..
Here is a video about Bobcats. If the above is correct, it seems possible that some of the photos are of Lynxes?
Link: “8 Sounds Bobcats Make and What Each Means,” written by Megan Martin, 15 August 2024 … https://a-z-animals.com/animals/bobcat/bobcat-facts/sounds-bobcats-make/ ..
According to Google AI, “Lynx canadensis and bobcats do interbreed in the wild, producing fertile offspring often referred to as “blynx” or “lynx-cat”. Documented mostly in the northeastern US and Canada, these hybrids occur when habitats overlap, particularly as warmer winters allow bobcats to move into northern lynx territories.”
So maybe some of the ‘Bobcats’ in the above citation are Blynxes or Lynx-Cats? If you take a look at the video in “4. Growls” in the above citation, you will see that is definitely about Bobcats, and that they are belting out thinnish but impressive ‘Roar’ ‘Roar’ …

Image: “Self-Portrait,” by Alice B. Clagett, 19 June 2024, CC BY-SA 4.0 International, from “Awakening with Planet Earth,” https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com ..
Image: “Self-Portrait,” by Alice B. Clagett, 19 June 2024, 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.
More license information
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interspecies communication, mammals, mountain lions, bobcats, coyotes,

