Tigers, by Elizabeth Kay
Tigers have played a big part in literature, from the
factual in Jim Corbett’s Man-eaters of
Kumaon to the literary in The Life of
Pi, And then there’s the children’s market – Tigger, in Winnie the Pooh and Hobbes in the comic
strip Calvin and Hobbes. Tigers seem
to be able to represent just about anything, from the Nazis in The Tiger who Came to Tea, to the
dishonourable side of man – Shere Khan in The
Jungle Books. And in some way they all retain their basic nature; Tigger
exhibits tigerishness, but it is muted to the less threatening play of a kitten:
Tigger said: “Excuse me,
but there’s something climbing up your table,” and with one loud Worraworraworraworraworra he jumped at
the end of the tablecloth, pulled it to the ground, wrapped himself up in it
three times, rolled to the other end of the room, and, after a terrible
struggle, got his head into the daylight again, and said cheerfully: “Have I
won?”
“That’s my
tablecloth,” said Pooh, as he began to unwind Tigger.
“I wondered
what it was,” said Tigger.
“It goes on your table and you
put things on it.”
“Then why
did it try to bite me when I wasn’t looking?”
“I don’t think it did,” said Pooh.
“It tried,”
said Tigger, “but I was too quick for it.”
Many years
ago I wrote a radio play about an escaped tiger, and I went to Chessington Zoo
before it became Chessington World of Adventures, to speak to the tiger keeper.
Expecting a tiger enthusiast, my first question was, “How long have you been
doing this?”
And the
answer was: “Too long.”
He regarded
it as one of the most dangerous jobs anyone could have – and perhaps, with good
reason. Tigers kill more people than any other big cat, both in and out of
captivity. In 2017 Rosa King, a keeper of fourteen years’ experience, was killed
by one and Howletts Zoo has had three keepers killed by tigers. Nevertheless,
they fascinate us.
I had my
first attempt at seeing a wild tiger in 1999, when I went to Dandeli Lodge in India. Tiger poo, tiger pugmarks, but no tigers. My second attempt was in 2014, in Bandhavgarh
National Park. I didn’t see a single one, and it was with a certain amount of
resignation that I decided to have a third go in October this year, in Tadoba, in Maharashtra State. Shortly before I left there were reports of a
man-eater not too far away. Sadly, after I returned home she was shot, much to the dismay of many people in India who didn't regard her as a dedicated man-eater, just a big cat who'd been in the wrong place at the wrong time.
The holiday
was amazing. I saw tigers on five days out of six, eight different individuals.
But the star was undoubtedly Maya, who is now quite famous. Our guide has
documented her life over the last eight years from when she was a cub, and
written several articles about her. So it was a real privilege to see Maya
close up – the closest our
guide had ever been to her. We were in open-topped
jeeps, and I could have leant out and touched her. She accompanied a clutch of
jeeps down the road for a while, crossing back and forth from one side to the
other. She just seemed mildly curious, but the moment we made eye contact will
remain with me for the rest of my life. I never felt threatened, despite the
fact that she could have dispatched me in seconds. She was stunningly beautiful,
in tip-top condition, and seemed to be fully aware of her public and their
interest in her.
We saw
another tiger freeze, one paw raised, and then hare off out of sight after a
wild boar. The day before, we watched two spotted deer approach a tiger that
was lying in the grass who saw them before they saw him. He flattened himself
to disguise his outline, but they caught on and made a dash for it.
There were a lot of other animals that made their presence felt. I’d always wanted to see dholes, the Indian Wild Dogs, and we came across a pack of five of them. They’re the colour of dingos, but although they’re smaller they bear a strong resemblance to the strikingly marked African Wild Dogs. Two sightings of sloth bears, which aren’t scared of tigers at all, and a marvellous moment when dozens of green bee-eaters decided to have a communal dust-bath.
There were a lot of other animals that made their presence felt. I’d always wanted to see dholes, the Indian Wild Dogs, and we came across a pack of five of them. They’re the colour of dingos, but although they’re smaller they bear a strong resemblance to the strikingly marked African Wild Dogs. Two sightings of sloth bears, which aren’t scared of tigers at all, and a marvellous moment when dozens of green bee-eaters decided to have a communal dust-bath.
I took a
lot of photographs, as you can see, but I don’t currently have any plans to
write about tigers. I do intend to paint them, though!
A rather
exiting moment occurred on my first night, when I found a small snake in the
loo. It looked remarkably like a krait, which is deadly poisonous, so I hurried
off to fetch someone. In the end the staff at the resort found three of them –
but they were harmless wolf snakes, krait lookalikes. I went to India with
Exodus, and it was my fifteenth trip with this particular company. They’re
mid-range, and they are very good indeed. I’ve seen jaguars, lions, cheetahs
and Iberian lynxes, although leopards continue to elude me. But my mind is now
turning towards snow leopards, as our guide runs a trip there - in 2020, maybe.
And they’re remarkably beautiful, too…
Comments
Tyger Tyger, burning bright,
In the forests of the night;
What immortal hand or eye,
Could frame thy fearful symmetry? ...
... Indeed.