Young cougar pair welcomed at Cape Breton wildlife park - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Young cougar pair welcomed at Cape Breton wildlife park

Two Rivers park staff hope the bonded cougar pair, Grumpy and Stumpy, will one day be parents.

Stumpy and Grumpy were orphaned by their mothers before moving to their new home

Jamie Rose feeds raw chicken to Grumpy. Two Rivers park staff hope that with a bonded pair of cougars, they may one day see a litter of cubs. (Erin Pottie/CBC)

The newest attractions at Two Rivers Wildlife Park in Huntington, N.S., have long whiskers, sharp teeth and enjoy raw chicken.

Their names are Stumpy and Grumpy.

The park's resident cougar, Harley, had to move to Shubenacadie Wildlife Park to make way for the newcomersfrom a wildlife park and zoo in Ontario.

Park attendant Jamie Rose said looking after thepair of bondedcougars is more than twice the work.

"It's just paying a lot more attention now," she said. "[They are] pretty much like a big house cat, just more dangerous.

"We keep our distance from the enclosure when we're feeding. We do have a gate that we lock down to go into where we feed them at, and we double-check, make sure everything is locked before we let them in to eat."

Staff at the Two Rivers Wildlife Park in Huntington, N.S., Jamie Rose, left, and Haeley Langlois stand in front of an enclosure that is now home to a pair of bonded cougars. (Erin Pottie/CBC)

The animals are young, around three years old, and were orphaned by their mothers. They had moved around a bit and needed a place with enough room to accommodate both.

Two Rivers administrator Haeley Langlois said Harley, who is 14, will be missed. She was the park's first cougar and spent nine years there.

"We couldn't have all three of them together here, so we made sure that Harley had the best place that she could go and she's not too far away," Langlois said.

Regular reports of cougars being spotted in the province might explain some of the attraction for having them at the park, she said.

"There's lots of sightings, per se, in Nova Scotia, but there's no real, hard proof that there is cougars in the wild in Nova Scotia, so people love to come and see the animals that we do have," she said.

A 14-year-old female cougar named Harley has called Two Rivers home since 2012. She will now become the resident cougar at a wildlife park in Shubenacadie, N.S. (Submitted by Haeley Langlois)

Stumpy, the male, has shorter legs than his female roommate, who earned the name Grumpy based on herpersonality.

"Grumpy is a little cranky towards them when we're feeding them, but that's a normal girl thing, I think," said Rose.

Langlois added that Grumpy is loving, but "does have an attitude."

The male cougar, Stumpy, left, and female cougar, Grumpy, can be seen waiting for their breakfast at the Two Rivers Wildlife Park. (Erin Pottie/CBC )

Staff hope the pair will make good parents.

"We're all hoping for that," said Rose. "It'll be a very exciting day if we find out that we have some babies in the spring."