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No sign of cougar after first day of searching near Mount Hood

The first search for the cougar included hounds trained to pick up a cougar's scent.

WELCHES, Ore. — Oregon wildlife officials set out to find a cougar that they believe attacked and killed a Gresham woman hiking near Mount Hood, but there was no sign of the cougar after Thursday's search.

Two federal wildlife officers entered the woods with mules and four hounds trained to pick up a cougar's scent around 6:30 a.m. They traveled about nine miles.

“It’s very important that we started our search at the site where Diana was found,” said Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife watershed manager Brian Wolfer. “The cougar wasn’t there. Tomorrow we will expand our search into a new area.”

There were no signs of cougar tracks in the area, and searchers did not see signs of cougar prey.

More: Forest Service closes 29,000 acres, 14 trails during cougar search

“This is big country,” Wolfer said. “The search may take some time and will be a fluid situation. We’ll continue to adjust our operation as necessary.”

Diana Bober, 55, was found dead Monday off the Hunchback Trail in Welches. She was reported missing on Aug. 29.

Wildlife officials said they believe Bober was killed by a cougar. The medical examiner's office said her injuries were consistent with that of a cougar attack. U.S. Fish and Wildlife will determine the animal that attacked Bober.

More: 'She fought hard': Oregon hiker killed by cougar fought for her life, sister says

The fatal attack would be the first by a wild cougar in Oregon history.

Searchers plan to kill a cougar, then test its DNA to see if it was the cougar that killed Bober.

“We are going to be as humane as possible when we do that,” said Wolfer.

Wolfer said search teams will not have the means to trap the cougar in rugged terrain and bring it to a secure location to test its DNA before killing it.

"Cougars are difficult to find under the best of circumstances and to be out in the rain and this steep, steep terrain complicates it considerably," said ODFW's Rick Swart.

A man who lives near Hunchback Mountain shared photos of a cougar recently taken by his "game cam." He believes there's a strong chance that it was the cougar who killed Bober.

Credit: KGW
Picture of a cougar taken by a resident's "game cam" near Hunchback Mountain

Cougars have vast but overlapping terrain. Wolfer said it is possible at least one dominant male, as well as one or two females, may be in the area.

“This is an unprecedented event,” said Swart. “Remember, this is the first time we’ve had a cougar kill a person in the wild in Oregon. So we want to get that cougar out.”

At the Mt. Hood Bicycle shop, mechanic and mountain bike rider Kevin McCarthy said he has come across two cougars on nearby mountains.

“One of them was just sitting up in the brush, just kind of watching us, and we just kept on our way and that was that. And the other one — pretty much the same scenario,” he said.

At Welches Middle School, parents got a message that children would be kept inside a six-foot fence that surrounds the playground and not allowed to venture onto a nature trail by the school. Experts say a cougar could easily jump the fence, but probably would not if children were together.

More: What to do if you see a cougar in the wild

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