The Ghost Cat and Me

Photographing pumas led me to discover wilderness in my backyard

Delilah DeSilva
Human Parts

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Photo by Priscilla Du Preez 🇨🇦 on Unsplash

The cat at the heart of this article has many names. You may know it as “mountain lion,” “cougar,” or “panther.” I will refer to it as “puma,” the name most often used by scientists like myself.

As a fresh undergraduate in a stuffy dorm room, I wanted nothing more than to experience wilderness. I was studying environmental science, but my classes consisted solely of PowerPoint slides and lectures. Stuck in Silicon Valley, I felt as far from nature as I could get.

So I left. I harassed my university’s study abroad office, and as soon as Covid regulations permitted, I escaped to Kenya to study elephants. I woke every morning to the towering sight of Kilimanjaro. I researched the world’s largest land animal, whose beauty brought me to tears. I witnessed the Great Migration, the crossing of 1.5 million wildebeest and 1 million zebra from Tanzania to Kenya. My fellow researchers and I hooped and hollered as we stood half out the top of a land cruiser, rain stinging our faces as we rode straight into a lightning storm through a landscape so saturated with wildebeest and zebra that their numbers faded into the horizon. This is what I’ve been looking for, I thought, this is where I’m meant to be.

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Delilah DeSilva
Human Parts

Early-career ecologist, hopeful environmentalist, horse girl. A scientist writing something other than scientific papers for a change.