Quick Take

Aptos High School students and staff sheltered in place Tuesday afternoon after a parent spotted a mountain lion on the baseball field.

Aptos High School had its students and staff shelter in place for about 30 minutes on Tuesday afternoon after a mountain lion was spotted on the school’s baseball field.

Principal Alison Hanks-Sloan said a parent first saw the animal and called school officials to alert them. The Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office came to check the campus, and the shelter-in-place order was lifted around 1:30 p.m., about 30 minutes after it began. The mountain lion had left the field and trekked down one of the dirt paths heading toward Freedom Boulevard.

It was a first for Hanks-Sloan, who joined the school as principal in July 2022 and was surprised to see a mountain lion right in the middle of a school day: “This is only Year 2 for me, so I haven’t had this happen yet,” she said. “I’ve been told of sightings in the past, but usually only in the morning and at night.”

However, Hanks-Sloan said a counselor working at the school used to be a student there and laughed about how often they used to shelter in place because of mountain lions in the vicinity. 

At least now, Hanks-Sloan said she will be better prepared for the next sighting: “It all went well, and now we know the drill!”

Have something to say? Lookout welcomes letters to the editor, within our policies, from readers. Guidelines here.

Max Chun is the general-assignment correspondent at Lookout Santa Cruz. Max’s position has pulled him in many different directions, seeing him cover development, COVID, the opioid crisis, labor, courts...