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 In the Northwoods and the Great Lakes Regions, the Anishinaabe people (Note 1) tell of Mishipeshu, the eternal foe of the Thunderbird. The Master of the Powers of Water, Mishipeshu lives in the deepest part of Lake Superior. Meanwhile, Her Children inhabit the lakes and rivers of the surrounding lands.
 
Mishipeshu, Herself, resembles a puma (panther) (Note 2) with copper horns and scales. Her home lies between Michipicoten (Lake Superior, Ontario) and Manitoulin Islands (Lake Huron, Ontario). She guards the copper of the region, with the Michipicoten Island being off limits for everyone, The copper are playthings for Her Children. Anyone taking copper is chased and drowned by Mishipeshu. She is the reason that many copper ships in Lake Superior are often lost during the raging tempests.
 
Possessing an ill temper, Mishipeshu will cause violent waters and storms to occur, often drowning people. Before making Herself known, She will speak in a roaring hiss sounding similar to rushing waters. When hearing her hissing, a traveler on the water will offer Mishipeshu tobacco to appease Her.
 
The Anishinaabe regard Mishipeshu necessary for keeping the balance of life. She protects lakes and rivers allowing the fish and wildlife to flourish. Since Mishipeshu can control the weather, She brings storms to clean the waters and rearrange the lands surrounding them. People will call on Her for protection since She ensures the purity of the ponds and streams.
 
The Prairie Band of the Potawatomi holds the Bundle Ceremony to honor Mishipeshu. (The ceremony involves opening a sacred bundle.) To ensure the well-being of the People, the Bundle Ceremony keeps the balance between the Thunderbird and Mishipeshu. As Master of Air, Thunderbird inhabits the skies, while Mishipeshu lives in the Underworld. (Traditional Ashinaabe quill work features both of these Gods.)
 
Notes:
Note 1: The Anishinaabe People are the Ojibwe, Odawa (Ottawa), Potawatomi, Mississaugas, Nipissing, and Algonquin.
 
Note 2: “Panther” is a commonly used word for several cats. The puma (cougar), a member of the Small Cat Sub-family, is called “panther.” The leopard and jaguar are also called “panther.”
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Ahighly adaptable cat, the puma lives in habitats ranging from snow-covered mountains to tropical rainforests of the Western Hemisphere. Because of her wide range, she has been called many names by many peoples. “Cougar” is derived from a Tupi word, which means “false deer,” because of her brown coat and large size. “Puma,” from the Quechua language of the Incas, means “power.” “Mountain Lion” was a joke that Native Americans played on the Dutch in New York. They told the Dutch that the puma was a female lion that lived in the mountains. (Note 1)
 
Known by many names, the puma is a member of the Small Cats (Felinae Sub-Family) (Note 2) rather than the Big Cats (Pantherinae Sub-Family). Often called “panther” (Note 3), this is a misnomer since the puma does not belong in the Big Cat Family. (“Black Panther” is either a black jaguar or leopard.) Like all Felinae, the puma cannot roar. However, she screams like a woman, which frightens people and other animals.
 
Because she is an exceptionally successful generalist, the puma survived the late Pleistocene extinctions of other large North American felids. Wherever she lives, the puma migrates to follow deer and other prey. She prefers living in caves or among rocky outcrops.
 
Among Native Americans, the puma has a mixed reputation. The Anishinaabe (Note 4) believe She is a being of chaos. (Note 5) The Shawnee see Her more positively, since they think She possesses the gift of prophecy. More familiar with the puma, the Apache People consider Her to be a good mother. The Seminole respect the Florida panther (a subspecies of pumas), who is associated with the winds. (Usually, the members of their Panther Clan are also their leaders.) At the ruins of the Pecos Pueblo is a burial mound honoring Puma as one of the “Beast Gods.”
 
The Huron-Wyandot and the Seneca connect the puma to comets. As the “Death Panther,” He warns the people of imminent disaster. With tobacco offerings, they ask “Death Panther” to “turn aside impending evil.”
 
In Mayan and Aztec cosmology, the puma represents the sun and the Upperworld. (The jaguar is the moon and the Underworld.) The Solar Puma is shown with a crown of rays at Teotihuacan. During the eclipses, the Solar Puma and the Lunar Jaguar form a sexual union or fight each other.
 
For the Incas, the Puma, with the Condor and Serpent, make up the Sacred Trilogy. (Note 6) The Puma represents the wisdom and strength of the earth. This Small Cat is associated with the Land of the Living (Kay Pacha). In fact, Cusco, the capital of the Inca Empire, is laid out depicting the Puma.
 
The puma has long been a part of North American folklore. Among the woodsmen, the ball-tailed cat is more feared than the puma. This cat is a puma with a giant bone ball at the end of his tail. It uses the ball to drum to attract females. The other use is to drop down on an unsuspecting lumberjack and beat them to death.
 
Another puma-like cat is the Wampus cat, a jet-black panther with glowing eyes. The Wampus cat, with her six legs, is a part of the folklore of the Appalachians. This cat has exceptional speed and agility. This makes it hard to protect livestock from the Wampus cat.
 
Long and lean, the puma is immensely powerful and capable of killing a black bear in a single bite. Stalking him, the puma makes a powerful leap on his back and knocks him to the ground. In forests, she races through the trees with great agility and speed. Concealing herself, the puma follows people closely without them sensing it. In fact, she is an “UFO,” often talked about but little seen.
 
By whatever name the puma is called, she is the epitome of personal power. Elusive and agile, the puma either strikes or watches as she chooses to do. As the graceful ruler of the mountains, she deals out life and death on her timetable. Just remember not to be so elusive and agile that no one can find you. Gary Urbak, a naturalist, noted “It’s sufficient just to know that sometimes in the shadows of dusk, felines on huge paws still creep across the land.”
 
Notes:
Note 1: Names for the puma: cougar, mountain lion, panther, catamount, leopardo.
 
Note 2: Scientists have traditionally split the Cat Family into two groups – the Big Cats (Pantherinae) and Small Cats (Felinae). Although many Felinae are small, the puma (cougar) and ocelot are not. However, they are smaller than Big Cats. Felines differ from Big Cats in other significant ways. Felines hunt by biting the back of their prey’s neck with their needle-sharp teeth. They sever the neck vertebrae of their prey. When felines eat, they crouch. Meticulous, they strive to keep themselves clean, and spend many hours grooming themselves.
 
Note 3: “Panther” is a commonly used word for several cats. The puma (cougar), a member of the Small Cat Sub-family, is called “panther.” The leopard and jaguar are also called “panther.”
 
Note 4: The Anishinaabe People are the Ojibwe, Odawa (Ottawa), Potawatomi, Mississaugas, Nipissing, and Algonquin.
 
Note 5: The Mishipeshu (Underwater Panther) is a Master of the Water and a foe of the Thunderbird, who is a Master of the Air. (Post on this Water God is forthcoming.)
 
Note 6: The Sacred Trilogy represents the Three Worlds of the Inca religion. The Condor, Emissary to the Gods, is associated with the Upper World (Hanan Pacha), The Serpent (Anaconda) with the Lower World (Ukhu Pacha). (A Post on the Trilogy is forthcoming.)
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 At one time, the leopard (Panthera pardus) (Note 1) lived from British Isles to Japan and though out Asia. Now restricted to Africa and Asia, he has been able to survive, in spite of humans. Opportunistic in his feeding habits, the leopard will eat anything from insects to giraffe calves. A solitary wanderer, the leopard is extremely difficult to spot in the wild. So great are his skills at being stealthy that the leopard can move through cattle herds without notice.
 
The strongest climber of the Cat Family (Note 2), the leopard keeps a low profile until he is ready to launch an attack. A smart hunter, the leopard constantly reviews the situation. He will try one way, change his mind, double back, detour around the prey, and then try again. After making his decision, then with laser-like concentration, the leopard silently stalks his prey. Just before attacking, he deliberately stamps the ground to distract his prey
 
In “The Cats of Africa,” Maitland Edey wrote, “Not so the leopard, the most catlike of all cats, the quintessential cat. Secretive, silent, smooth and supple as a piece of silk, he is an animal of the darkness, and even in the dark he travels alone.”
 
Because of the leopard’s fierce reputation, many peoples associate him with divinity. Egyptians linked the leopard with Set, their God of Chaos. In Greece, Dionysus, the God of Wine, often rode a leopard or had one by his side.
 
In Africa, the leopard holds the power of life and death. Only African royalty, who could wield such power, are allowed to wear leopard skins. Moreover, these individuals had the power of life over death in religious ceremonies.
 
Seshat of Egypt is depicted as a woman wearing a leopard skin and a headband of a seven-pointed star. She is the Goddess of Official Building (the Mistress of Builders). As a Goddess of Writing, Seshat keeps the royal annals and genealogies. The leopard skin denotes her association with the Pharaohs.
 
Meanwhile, Wuluo, the Mountain Deity of Qingyao Mountain in China, guards the area. A leopard-human Goddess, She makes a tinkling jade sound when She speaks. Wuluo will answer the prayers of pregnant women who come to the mountain desiring daughters.
 
Since the Romans used leopards to kill Christians, he became the Christian “Beast of the Apocalypse”- a Leopard with seven heads and ten horns. In Daniel and Revelation, the leopard was the ferocity, speed, and astuteness of the military might of Alexander the Great’s Empire. Also, the leopard is the untrustworthy sinner in death. (as in “Can a leopard change his spots?”)
 
Because of the black panther’s color (note 3), great mysticism is associated to her. In China, She rules the North with Winter. Associated with the Dark Mother, Black Panther sees into every soul. With her penetrating yellow-green gaze, She can also look into the future.
 
Romans saw the black panther as the embodiments of Bacchus, the God of Wine. He chose black panthers to pull his chariot. Together, They governed the subconscious and repressed desires.
 
Meanwhile in Australia, black panthers have been secretly roaming the bushland. Known as the Otway (Lithgow) Panther, this Big Cat has been dismissed as bush folklore. However, reputable witnesses have produced evidence of this black panther. The mystery continues.
 
Achieving your goal is what the leopard teaches. Instead of doing things only one way, he assesses the situation. After trying several options, the leopard settles on one. Then with intense concentration, he approaches and kills his prey.
 
Notes
Note 1: True panthers (Panthera pardus) live in the Old World. The jaguar (Panthera onca) is found only in the New World. The jaguar is stockier, and more powerful than the panther (also known as the leopard.) However, they belong to the same Sub-Family. Meanwhile, the Snow Leopard (Panthera uncia) is a separate species in the Big Cat family. However, the Clouded Leopard (Neofelis nebulosa) is considered neither a Small Cat nor a Big Cat.
 
Note 2. Cats are traditionally divided into two groups – Big and Small Cats. Big Cats (Pantherinae) differ from Small Cats (Felinae) in several ways. They roar instead of purr, with their roars being very loud and resonant. Unlike Small Cats, Big Cats attack animals larger than themselves. They suffocate the prey with a strangle hold on the neck or by covering the prey’s snout with their jaws. Messy eaters, Big Cats do not groom themselves as meticulously as Small Cats.
 
The Cat Subfamilies: Felinae includes the puma, ocelot, jaguarundi, and margay cat. Pantherinae includes the bobcat, jaguar, lion, leopard (panther), lynx, and tiger.
 
Note 3: “Panther” is a commonly used word for several cats. The puma (cougar), a member of the Small Cat Sub-family, is called “panther.” The jaguar is also called “panther.”

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