Unseen Shadows: UK Big Cat Sightings – Spring 2026 Update

A big cat lays silhouetted against a dusk sky.

From the hills of Wales to the heathlands of Dorset, reports of large, unidentified cats continue to surface across the British countryside.

Most are brief encounters. A shape crossing a field. A dark animal slipping through woodland. A dog walker forced to stop mid-stride as something far larger than a domestic cat disappears into the hedgerow.

These reports are rarely treated seriously in the national press. Often they appear in the odd-news columns or alongside stories about mythical creatures and folklore.

Yet they refuse to disappear into the shadows alongside their subjects. And over the past few months, several new sightings have once again brought Britain’s big cats back into the open.

Do big cats stalk Britain’s Bodmin Moor?

A Panther Prowl’s Ed Sheeran’s Estate.

One of the most widely circulated reports recently came from Suffolk, where a large black cat was seen near the £37 million country estate of musician Ed Sheeran.

Witnesses described a large dark animal moving across farmland close to the property. The sighting prompted speculation that a so-called “panther” might be roaming the countryside and the story travelled quickly through national and international media, largely because of the celebrity connection.

But aside from the location, the details themselves were familiar to anyone who has followed the phenomenon for long. A large, dark cat moving with fluid, purposeful motion, low to the ground. Exactly the sort of description that appears again and again in regional sightings.

Cats Across the Countryside

All over Britain, similar reports continue to surface.

In Dorset, a sighting on Canford Heath near Poole described what a witness believed to be a black panther moving through open heathland.

In Wiltshire, a dog walker near Chippenham reported encountering a large cat on a popular countryside footpath. The witness described an animal significantly larger than a domestic cat, with a long tail and dark colouring.

Further west, a report from Newquay in Cornwall described a large cat seen at distance moving across farmland. Cornwall has long been one of the regions most frequently associated with Britain’s “phantom cats”, often linked with the legend of the Beast of Bodmin Moor.

In North Wales, motorists and walkers have also reported large feline shapes crossing rural roads or moving along field margins. One witness claimed the animal they saw was nearly the height of a car bonnet as it passed through the roadside vegetation.

These accounts vary in detail, but the core descriptions tend to be remarkably consistent.

A powerful, long-tailed cat – often dark in colour, but tan and other hued cats are also reported, seen briefly before disappearing into woodland, scrub, or across farmland.

Britain offers significant habitat that could harbour unseen predators.

A Long History of Sightings

Reports of large cats in Britain are of course, nothing new.

Newspaper archives contain sightings dating back decades, particularly from the late twentieth century when stories of “phantom panthers” became a recurring feature of rural folklore.

Many researchers have suggested these reports may trace back to the Dangerous Wild Animals Act of 1976, which introduced licensing requirements for keeping exotic animals. The persistent theory is that a number of privately owned big cats may have been released into the countryside when the law came into force. Since then, further releases and escapes have contributed to more recent sightings.

We might not have direct hard proof or evidence. But, given the scale of the exotic animal trade – both legal and illegal, and the lack of funding to check on many privately-owned animals and licensing both back then and even more so today, it’s not without merit.

And sightings have never stopped.

From Exmoor and Dartmoor to the Surrey Hills, the Welsh countryside, and parts of Scotland – reports of large cats have popped up year in, year out, and continue.

Missed by the Media

Despite the number of sightings over the years and the many reliable witnesses, which include respected journalists and presenters like Clare Balding, the subject is rarely treated with much seriousness in mainstream media.

Often it appears in the same category as folklore creatures or mythical monsters.

The BBC’s Countryfile, for example, recently included Britain’s phantom cats in a list of “mythical beasts”, placing them alongside legendary creatures rather than unexplained wildlife reports. This framing shapes how the subject is perceived.

Instead of examining witness testimony, ecological plausibility, or historical context, the discussion often becomes a curiosity piece – something to be lightly dismissed rather than investigated.

Yet eyewitness testimony remains one of the primary ways wildlife is documented in many parts of the world.

The same observational accounts that guide conservation surveys in remote landscapes are often treated very differently when they occur in the British countryside.

Panther or Puma?

Another recurring problem is species confusion.

Many reports describe a black big cat. But media coverage frequently labels these animals as pumas. The issue with that identification is simple: pumas do not occur in black form. There are no verified melanistic pumas anywhere in the world.

Black big cats, commonly called “black panthers” – are usually one of two animals: leopards or jaguars. In Britain, the most plausible identification would be melanistic leopards.

Leopards are adaptable animals capable of surviving in a wide range of habitats, from rainforest to semi-arid environments and mountainous regions. They are also far more likely than most big cats to survive undetected in fragmented landscapes.

Pumas too, also known as mountain lions and a myriad of other names, are some of the most adaptable cat species, found from the Florida everglades to the high plains of Chile and the deserts of Arizona.

Why Some Researchers Look to Malaysia

If Britain does host a small surviving population of melanistic leopards, one intriguing possibility involves the Malayan leopard.

In the rainforests of the Malay Peninsula, south of the Isthmus of Kra, melanism is extremely common. In fact, the majority of leopards in this region are black.

Interestingly, this detail surfaced while researching my current novel Predatory Nature, where the history of exotic big cats imported into Europe during the twentieth century led me down a rabbit hole into the unusual genetics of Malayan leopards.

These cats are also smaller than many other leopard subspecies, which historically made them attractive to exotic animal collectors and the trade supplying them.

During the mid-twentieth century, when keeping exotic animals became fashionable in parts of Europe and especially the United Kingdom, animals described as “black panthers” were imported from Southeast Asia, to the point that the population was significantly impacted. And today, the population is dominated by those sporting the melanism gene.

The smaller size of the Malaysian sub-species helped fuel the mistaken belief they would be easier to manage. In reality, of course, a leopard is never a domestic animal.

But if any such cats were released or escaped decades ago, their melanistic coats would have offered a natural advantage in Britain’s woodland landscapes, particularly in low light, where their rosette markings are almost invisible – which is a factor that should be taken into account when witnesses describe cats as “jet black”.

Mystery in the Hedgerows

None of this proves definitively that Britain currently hosts a breeding population of large cats.

Most sightings could still have more mundane explanations: misidentified dogs, escaped exotic pets, or fleeting glimpses of ordinary wildlife seen in poor conditions.

Everyday domestic cats are also likely culprits. The recent Devon sighting is a possible example. Despite gaining significant coverage in the press, and comparisons to the Beast of Bodmin in neighbouring Cornwall – the animal in this video moves like a domestic cat, and has the head shape and movement in line with this. However, the published video quality is very poor and it is very difficult to make any kind of certain identification. A feral cat, which can grow to larger sizes, is also a likely possibility.

But the persistence of the reports and the consistency of many descriptions keeps the question alive and shouldn’t be dismissed or derided.

There’s a good chance the truth lies somewhere between folklore and biology. It’s not just possible, but likely, that there are a small number of big cats of more than one species surviving quietly in remote pockets of the British countryside.

Combined with the enduring human instinct to see shadows move at the edge of the woods and wonder what might be watching back, it’s unlikely reports are going to disappear.

Either way, Britain’s phantom cats remain one of the country’s most enduring wildlife mysteries. And every now and then, someone sees something crossing a field that refuses to fit neatly into the explanations we already have.

Monster Monday: The Beast of Exmoor

Rumour, Release, or Something Wild?

Today, we’re going to look at one of the more (or should that be moor?) well-known of Britain’s best-known cryptids. A mystery cat that’s right up my alley. But, before there was a beast, there was a landscape.

Exmoor is open, wind-cut, and exposed. Sheep move across long lines of sight as they graze, perhaps in a false sense of security that Britain’s predators are long-banished. Granite outcrops and banks of heather hold the last of the day’s light. When something crosses that horizon, it might be seen but just as quickly, it can slip back into the many shadows and hiding places on the moor.

In 1983, Devon farmer Eric Lane began losing young lambs. The predation was both serious and mysterious. Then, larger, full-grown lambs began to be taken. Ultimately, Lane reported losing more than fifty sheep. And across the region, estimates suggested over one hundred full-grown ewes were killed in what the press began calling the Beast’s “rampage”. Carcasses were found with throats torn and little meat consumed. Some reports described clean kills. Others suggested variation. No body was recovered. No animal was conclusively identified.

The police took the matter seriously enough to organise searches and vigils. And then, as the death toll of livestock mounted, they called in the army. At least one patrol involved a former Royal Marine, John Holden, who was later interviewed in the documentary Panthera Britannia: Declassified. Holden described seeing a large cat-like animal during a night patrol. A shot was reportedly taken by another member of the patrol. After that incident, sheep losses diminished. But no carcass, no blood trail, and no confirmed remains were ever found.

Absence became the defining feature of the case.

A Naturalist’s Theory

Among those who treated the killings as a wildlife question rather than a ghost story was Devon-based zoologist, naturalist, and conservationist Trevor Beer (1937-2017), who investigated sightings across the region for decades.

Beer did not dismiss the accounts outright. Nor did he frame them as folklore. Based on reported behaviour and differences in sightings, he suggested that two separate large cats — possibly a puma and a leopard — might explain the variation. It was a practical hypothesis. If attacks differed in method, perhaps more than one animal was involved.

Importantly, this was not a claim of proof. It was an attempt to reconcile inconsistent details with ecological reasoning. And that matters.

Because Britain in the 1970s and early did have privately owned exotic cats. Before the Dangerous Wild Animals Act of 1976, keeping such animals was not uncommon. Archival BFI footage (also from early 1976) exists of a puma being walked in Barnstaple. After the Act tightened licensing requirements, stories began circulating that some owners released animals rather than surrender them, and this has become a fundamental and foundational part of the British big cat phenomenon.

What is documented is patchy. What is alleged is plentiful.

Release Stories and Blurred Memory

Over time, rumours became interwoven with the facts and real investigations.

A Barnstaple butcher who supposedly owned a puma and a leopard and got in trouble with the law was said to have released his pets as he fled the country. A zoo owner alleged to released animals onto Dartmoor rather than face an unknown fate. Stories of circus transfers, licence losses, and midnight liberations threatened to blend fact with fiction.

For instance, I think it’s no coincidence that there is archival BFI footage of a man walking his pet puma in Barnstable and there is a story about the supposed butcher and his ‘guard panthers’. But I think it’s a blurring of memory. In 1976, the population of Barnstable was that of a small country parish, a little over 10,000 people. It’s hard to believe there were two individuals with a pet puma. And there is no documented evidence of a butcher with two big cats – surely that would have made at least one local paper?

Benjamin Mee is the owner of Dartmoor Zoo, which became famous after the film ‘We Bought A Zoo’ put its story in the spotlight. Again, for Panthera Britannia, Mee recounts a sighting of a big cat in the village, shortly after moving to Dartmoor. There is also a reference to the former zoo operator Ellis Daw, who was alleged to have released three pumas onto Dartmoor. But again, does that conflate events and allegations surrounding Mary Chipperfield, who was also said to release three pumas, among her favourite animals, whilst transferring them from Plymouth Zoo after it closed in 1978, which was owned by the Chipperfield family at the time.

The difficulty is not that these names appear. It is that the stories begin to overlap.

Separate incidents, across counties and years, begin to compress into a single narrative mass. Exmoor and Dartmoor become interchangeable in casual retelling. A puma becomes “a black panther”. Two animals become one roaming shadow.

Memory simplifies. Landscape absorbs detail.

Could a Big Cat Survive?

Ecologically, the idea is not impossible. In fact, it’s very probable.

The Cougar is highly adaptable. In North America, it occupies deserts, forests, mountains, and the fringes of cities. It can take deer and livestock. It is solitary, elusive, and capable of travelling large distances. In turn, leopards are found from the desserts of Africa through to the Siberian plateau and are considered one of the most adaptive of the big cats.

A released animal, in theory, could survive, at least for a time. And, the sheep kills are suggestive of a released animal with limited experience taking easy prey. It is widely reported that wild big cats avoid taking sheep, as they find the wool problematic to remove, and don’t like the texture of it in the mouth. However, there is enough of an issue of pumas taking sheep in Chile for there to be a government-backed guardian livestock dog programme, documented by National Geographic’s ‘Up Close with Bertie Gregory’. So, we know sheep are on the menu, at least for some big cats.

@bertiegregory

We used military-grade thermal imaging cameras to allow us to film guardian dogs protecting sheep from pumas in the middle of the night. This strategy is good news for farmers and good news for pumas, alongside the dogs. However, it is also critical that farmers manage their land to support wild puma prey populations. 🎥: #AnimalsUpClose

♬ original sound – Bertie Gregory

But survival is not proof of presence.

And livestock predation patterns are not always straightforward. Dogs, foxes, and even corvids can complicate carcass interpretation once an animal has fallen. Bite placement, caching behaviour, feeding style… these details matter, but they are rarely preserved cleanly in open moorland.

What Remains

What is harder to dismiss is the shift in perception.

Farmers scanned ridgelines differently. Dog walkers reported silhouettes where before there had been none. The moor, already vast, felt less empty.

Whether the Beast of Exmoor was:

  • A released exotic
  • Multiple animals folded into one legend
  • A misidentified large dog
  • Or a solitary cat that came and went without leaving a body

…the story altered how people saw their landscape.

That is often how monsters begin.

Not with certainty.
Not with spectacle.
But with a disruption, a suggestion that the familiar ground may not be entirely ours.

In my own fiction, I’m often less interested in proving the beast exists than in exploring what changes in us when we believe it might.

The Beast of Exmoor remains ultimately unproven. But the space it opened, between where we live and wilderness, between rumour and ecology, still lingers across the moor. And sightings still continue, as does the mystery.