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Phoenix Zoo mourns Mystic the Mountain Lion

Phoenix Zoo mourns Mystic the Mountain Lion

Yahoo16-05-2025
The Brief
Mystic the Mountain Lion has died, the Phoenix Zoo said on May 15.
She was humanely euthanized due to advanced renal failure.
Her death comes months after her sister, Sierra, died from the same disease.
PHOENIX - The Phoenix Zoo is mourning the loss of Mystic the Mountain Lion just months after losing her sister.
What they're saying
"It is with a heavy heart we share that 18-year-old mountain lion, Mystic, was humanely euthanized this week due to rapidly declining health caused by advanced renal failure. Her sister, Sierra, passed away in February of the same disease," the Phoenix Zoo said on May 15.
The zoo says Mystic and her sister Sierra arrived in Phoenix as orphaned cubs from South Dakota.
"Our keepers and staff cared for the sisters for the last 17 years and are dearly missing their secretive but sweet nature," the zoo said.
When the zoo's new Big Cats of Arizona exhibit opened, Mystic moved in to her new home.
"We feel fortunate to have witnessed her exploring the space and having the chance to welcome guests to the new habitat," the zoo said.
The zoo says Mystic and Sierra are the blueprint for how they support and raise orphaned mountain lions.
"We celebrate their legacy and impact by continuing to grant second chances at life, starting with Fern and Thistle who will be joining us later this summer," the zoo said.
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Topps Throwbacks: Unpacking 1990's Topps MLB Booster Packs
Topps Throwbacks: Unpacking 1990's Topps MLB Booster Packs

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Topps Throwbacks: Unpacking 1990's Topps MLB Booster Packs

Collecting baseball cards often blurs the line between investment and obsession. Especially when you realize that the value of the standard baseball card is akin to the paper it's printed on. Unless your card is graded or some super rare insert with a piece of jersey in it, you are have an often pretty, sometimes drab and uninspired piece of visual photographic art of a sport you love. So it is as I find myself finally, after many years of deliberation, opening up a handful of sealed Topps MLB booster packs from the 1990s. A collector's journey Like many children of the 1990s my collecting impulses were influenced and financed by my father. While there is some regret in not leaving some Star Wars and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles figures in their blister packs, the baseball cards were opened without such regard. Because as we would learn later, the inherent value would continuously sink, especially as the market was flooded with new brands and fancy inserts. My father collected every Topps set from 1985 to 2004, stopping when he became frustrated with the deluge of new cards and brands. He bought the sets at the end of every year, for around $40, and packs throughout the year just for kicks. I only acquired the packs. That is, until he passed late last year, when I acquired his entire collection. Due to the lack of storage space in my collecting closet, I sold them all. There weren't any individual cards worth anything, unless I wanted to pay to have them graded, but the collector at the flea market was enthused by my father's organization (everything was in binders, in order). And while I did stop collecting baseball cards in the 90s (transitioning to Magic: The Gathering cards, Gundam models, LEGO sets, Funko Pops, and a slew of other random crap), I still hold that nostalgia, mostly because I still watch and love baseball (a game I also played until college). 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But it did feel nice to thumb through these classic cards, all in perfect condition, and now headed into a card box to be shoved under the bed until my kids throw them out. 1992 Topps This was a very unremarkable year in baseball card collecting, as far as value. Nothing tops $2 as a single, ungraded card. There were a few rookies, but the only redeeming value of the 1992 set was collecting cards of your favorite players. For me, at that time, it was Mark Grace and pretty much any Atlanta Braves pitcher. Unfortunately I didn't pull any Jim Thome cards from any of these packs, any year. This was my all-time favorite player and up until last year (when our house flooded) I had a binder full of roughly 400 Jim Thome cards. But I did pull a checklist (honestly, one of the best non-player cards ever) and a reminder that Deion Sanders played baseball. 1993 Topps 1993 is when things started to change with the structure of baseball cards. 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