My Obsession with Big Cats, by Elizabeth Kay
The real thing |
My illustration of a lion |
It all started with a book I was given as a child, Animal Life of the World. It was
published in 1934, and reflects the values and attitudes of the time. The
photographs were all in black and white, and the chapter titles were quaintly imaginative.
Little Bandits of our Hills and Hedgerows,
Leather-sided Giants, Animals Verging on Extinction (the
Thylacine was still going at this point), and The Big Cats. I must have been given this book before I could read,
because initially I just looked at the pictures. The chapter entitled Big Game of Other Days (note the word
game!) fascinated me, with its photographs of model iguanodons and
megalosauruses in realistic swampy settings. I couldn’t tell the difference
between them and a photograph of a live animal, and I assumed that dinosaurs were alive
and well and living in a remote part of Africa, as I’d never seen them at the
zoo. The book had a profound effect on me, and I wanted to see all these
creatures in their natural habitats. Once I could read, the text was a mine of
information, and some pictures caught my imagination more than others.
Puma |
Cheetah, in Kenya |
There were
a lot of lions and tigers and leopards, but the cat that I found the most
threatening was the black panther. The legend underneath the photo went as
follows: The Black Panther is a powerful
creature, very dangerous and liable to become a man-eater. As this animal does
not turn even from putrid flesh, the wounds it inflicts on human beings are
liable to blood-poisoning.
The Scottish wildcat - the only cat that has never been tamed by anyone. I saw this one at the British Wildlife Centre, in Lingfield. |
This now
looks like a load of tosh, as the black panther is not a species in its own
right, but just a melanistic leopard or jaguar. Jaguars hardly ever attack
humans, and are never man-eaters in the sense that the Kumaon man-eaters were.
This notorious pair of Indian leopards killed 525 people all told, a decade or
so before the book was published, so the events were fresh in people’s
memories. Although all cats are opportunistic, putrid flesh isn’t top of the
menu, and all wounds inflicted by a bite in a hot climate are liable to infection.
Jaguar, Brazil |
Nevertheless,
as a child I longed for opportunities to see these creatures first-hand, but
never thought I’d get the chance when it took six weeks by boat to get to India.
It’s a very different matter today, when flights are fast and relatively cheap,
but even when I first visited Kenya in 1993 and saw lions for real I never
thought I’d get to repeat the experience. Since then, I’ve totted up quite a
few big cats. As well as the lions there have been tigers, jaguars, cheetahs,
lynxes, servals… But I’ve never managed to see a leopard, after 11 attempts. It’s
become a bit of an obsession.
Last year in India... |
Big cats
feature a lot in children’s books. The
Tiger Who Came to Tea, Aslan in the Chronicles
of Narnia, Tigger in Winnie the Pooh.
Adults get a rather more unpleasant version in The Life of Pi. Richard Parker, the tiger, is a much darker
character than Tigger. The only time I wrote about a big cat myself was for a
radio play that was broadcast in the 1980s. It was about an escaped tiger, and
in those days Chessington World of Adventures was Chessington Zoo, so I went
there to talk to the tiger keeper. I asked him how long he’d being doing the
job, and he said, “Too long.” He regarded the profession as being very
dangerous indeed, and it was clear that he was terrified of his charges. My
escaped radio tiger didn’t kill anyone, and voluntarily returned to her enclosure
where she felt safe.
These days, I tend to paint the animals I
photograph both on holiday and in zoos, and I’ve used them in illustrations for
Kindle versions of books published traditionally. A lot of the time I didn’t
particularly like the original illustrations, so re-doing them stopped me
infringing someone else’s copyright. It faithfully illustrated the text rather
than having someone else’s version – which was often inaccurate, as the
illustrator hadn’t read it properly, and
it saved me forfeiting royalties for illustrations I resented. The best
illustrator I ever had was for a Japanese edition, where every tiny detail was
spot-on. I wrote to thank her, heard nothing for six months, and then the
original of my favourite picture arrived from her from Japan. I was really
touched; what a lovely thing to do.
The leopard I've yet to see - illustration for Hunted |
There is
something very quest-like, about setting out to find and observe a particular
animal. Some years ago I decided it was time a saw an adder, our only native
venomous snake, in the wild. I covered a lot of south-east England, getting
nowhere, until someone suggested the heath section of my local common, ten minutes
from where I live. I’ve been watching them ever since, more brightly patterned
after shedding their skins in the spring, lively in the height of summer,
sluggish and dull-coloured in the autumn. Last year I had my third attempt at
seeing tigers in the wild. The first time had been in Karnataka, where I saw
pug marks and tiger poo (white with calcium like hyena poo, because they often
eat the bones). The second time was Bandhavgarh, where the other two jeeps saw
them and we didn’t. The last time was Tadoba, where we saw them every day
except for the last, when we saw a sloth bear instead. And yes, it was magical.
When this post goes live I will be in Botswana, having yet another go at seeing
a leopard.
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