Online outrage after Canadian TV host kills cougar in northern Alberta
Ecklund posted several photos of him holding the dead cougar; another of him making a stir-fry from the meat
A Canadian TV personality is taking heat online after he killed a cougar in northern Alberta.
Steve Ecklund, who's the host of the outdoor show The Edge, bragged about hunting the huge cat earlier this month.
"What an unreal ending to a fun filled season," he wrote on his Facebook page on Dec. 3.
Ecklund posted several photos of him holding the dead cougar and another of him making a stir-fry from the meat.
What a creep. Chasing a cougar with dogs until they are exhausted then shooting a scared, cornered and tired animal. Must be compensating for something, small penis probably.<a href="https://t.co/UspnQEdWdL">https://t.co/UspnQEdWdL</a>
—@LaureenHarper
I come from a family that hunts and fishes. Learned to use every part of an animal. Killing for fun makes me sick.
—@LaureenHarper
Wasn’t hacked. I was really angry that some guy flies all the way to Alberta to kill a magnificent cougar, so he can make a stir fry. <a href="https://t.co/m4skcCGjZ4">https://t.co/m4skcCGjZ4</a>
—@LaureenHarper
"A senseless killing ... and something to be ashamed of for the rest of your pointless life. Loser," wrote one Facebook user, Rich Voysey.
Neither Ecklund nor the Chorneys have responded to requests for comment, but he didn't back down in subsequent posts about the hunt.
"If you can guess what post has 900 likes, 450 comments, 13 confirmed death threats, 754 swear words and one very happy hunter in it ... I will enter your name into the draw for the new cougar cook book, filled with mouth water recipes for your next mountain lion hunt," Ecklund wrote in a Dec. 4 post.
Others on social media defended Ecklund's right to hunt the cougar.
"Awesome harvest Steve!" said Facebook user, Mitchell Jones. "Keep up the good work and ignore these simpletons, clearly they haven't a clue how the world works and are out of touch with reality."
Cougar hunting is legal in Alberta from Sept. 1 to the end of February for residents, and from Dec. 1 to the end of February for non-residents.