When most folks think about mountain lions, they picture a secretive cat haunting one stretch of country and calling it home. And most of the time that’s true. According to Outdoor Writer Stephen Ziegler via Rack Junkies podcast, GPS collar studies show lions sticking to a home range, with young males eventually packing their bags and drifting a few dozen… maybe a couple hundred miles to find their own turf. Pretty impressive, right? Well, buckle up.
Every now and then, a lion decides to ignore the rulebook. The most insane case didn’t even come from a tracking collar—it was pieced together through genetics and a necropsy. A young tom started out in the Black Hills of South Dakota and somehow ended up in Connecticut. That’s more than 1,500 miles. Not a typo. That cat basically went on a cross-country tour.
And it’s not just a one-time fluke. GPS data has captured other marathon treks, including a female mountain lion that logged close to 1,000 miles across several western states during dispersal. These aren’t everyday movements—but they’re real, documented, and a powerful reminder that these big cats aren’t just territorial shadows in the timber. When the urge hits, they can roam on a scale that’s hard to wrap your head around.
Turns out, “wide-ranging” might be the understatement of the century.
