Sher Khan and the Wolves

By Brian K. Weirum

Bandhavgarh, INDIA           

It’s early morning and the dappled sunlight is just breaking through the trees of the deep Bandhavgarh forest. We’re driving down a small dirt lane between Sera and Rajbera Meadows, behind the massive plateau from which Bandhavgarh takes its name. Our road is suddenly blocked by the massive grey bulk which is Gautam, the lead elephant used for patrols, tiger monitoring and tourist forays into the jungle. Atop Gautam is Kuttapan, the renowned mahout who has been at Bandhavgarh for 24 years and who knows more about its tigers than anyone. Kuttapan gets my attention and points to something on the road. It’s the distinct impression of a tiger’s body which has recently laid down on the road. The imprint -torso, fore-paws and tail- lies clearly over any tracks or disturbances which may have come in the night.

Off to the right we hear the distinct “bleep-bleep”- the alarm call of the chital, or spotted deer, announcing the presence of a predator. Kuttapan and Gautam go off to investigate and we begin to drive around to intercept them on the other side of the forest. Not ten yards down the road, a loud “varoom”- the call of the tiger, is heard, and we slide to a halt on the dusty road. Walking directly towards us at a distance of 100 yards is a large male tiger. It’s one of Bachhi’s 3-year-old males known to share this territory with his brother.

We sit in stunned silence and open jeeps. Some cameras continue to whir and click and some knuckles begin to whiten as grips tighten on the seats and roll bars of the jeep. The tiger continues his insouciant stroll directly towards us. About 20 yards from our jeep, he walks into a small clearing off the road, turns to mark a tree with his scent, then comes back out on to the road and walks past us within 3 feet of the jeep. Suspension of all breathing is the easiest thing in the world at a moment like this.

When the tiger is about 50 yards past us, our reverie is broken by a commotion in the forest across the road. Anil, our Nepali naturalist, whispers loudly, “WOLVES!” There, propped up like little statues in a clearing in the forest, are two Indian grey wolves. Rigid, alert, clearly in a state of alarm and agitation, they begin yelping at the tiger. The tiger spins around on the road and charges off into the forest after them.

We drive down the road to where it curves back to where we were originally headed to meet Kuttapan and Gautam. There in an open clearing stands the tiger, looking around as if to ask “Where’d they go?” We park the jeeps and watch an incredible silent drama unfold.

As the tiger turns to walk away, out of the forest comes the larger of the wolves, probably the male, and scampers up to within a few yards of the tiger. The tiger turns his head and the wolf scampers back into the forest. The tiger continues to walk away down the road. Out of the forest comes the larger wolf again and scampers up to within what is apparently a safe distance from the tiger. This time the tiger turns around and glowers at the wolf, probably assessing the distance between them and the speed it would take to catch the wolf. They stare at each other for a few seconds, the tiger is still, and the wolf is nervously pacing back and forth. The muscles of the tiger begin to twitch and off goes the wolf into the forest again. Finally after one more of these encounters, the tiger has now moved some distance away and the wolf disappears one last time into the forest. One can only assume that the aggressive and bold behavior of the wolf meant he was protecting some pups and wanted to be sure the tiger was driven out of his territory.

The tiger, now left in peace, continues his stroll. He moves off the road into a patch of golden grass ablaze with sunlight, marks the spot with his spray, turns around, crosses the road in front of our jeeps, and disappears into the forest. This marking of territory and turning around was not whimsical. A few hundred yards down the road, Kuttapan and Gautam have found the tiger they were looking for, the brother, relaxing in the dry leaves of a bamboo forest, his nose still visibly scarred from a fight with Charger.

Kipling could not have scripted this better. Though he never visited the forests of Central India, his fabled jungle stories took place in these hills- what is now Madhya Pradesh and the forests of Kanha and Bandhavgarh. Shere Khan and the wily wolves in a taunting, even mocking, dance of survival.

Death of a Tigress 

Bandhavgarh, INDIA           

On the night of March 28, 2003, the tigress known as Mohini (Bachhi) was mortally wounded when hit by a vehicle. Rumors about the incident have swirled for months, but at this point in time it’s academic exactly where the incident took place or what type of vehicle it was. It was either out on the Umaria-Tala Road or in the NW corner of the park at a place called Badrasilla (Charger Point). What is known is that she suffered severe face and head injuries, broken canines, was disoriented, and in an obvious state of pain and agitation. She attacked a guard post at Garhpuri around 6 am the morning of March 29th- startling the poor chap cooking breakfast. Her teeth were found in one of the wooden posts. The fellow said she seemed enraged and confused as she crossed the road, attacked a metal sign, and entered the park. Shortly thereafter, Mohini came upon a row of seven jeeps, eagerly awaiting a photo opportunity that had been heralded by chital and sambar alarm calls. Four jeeps noticed that the tigress was severely injured and yelled for the others to get out of her way. They were either unable or unwilling to do so.   I have seen a photo of the bloodiedsnarling tigress walking toward a camera. Had the other jeeps respected the fact that this was a tiger in a state of severe distress, headlines saying “Tigress Mauls French Tourists in India” would not have hit the news wires. Those of you who have been to Bandhavgarh know that a healthy tiger would have walked past the jeeps unconcerned. People kept yelling at the jeeps nearest Mohini to back off. But cameras continued to roll. There was loud growling- some who were there think Mohini and her nearby cubs were calling back and forth. Suddenly Mohini crouched and leapt into the back of one of the jeeps. The guide and driver ran off but two French tourists were pinned underneath the angry tigress. Some of the other guides came running over, hitting her with bamboo sticks and one pulled her off by the tail- Mohini literally falling on top of the lead guide, a local lodge owner. A brief scuffle ensued and finally Mohini walked off into the forest. She has not been seen since. The tourists and guide were treated at local hospitals and released with ‘relatively’ minor injuries. This would not have been the case with a healthy tiger. It is thought that Mohini was trying to get home to her three 18-month-old cubs. She never made it.

RANTHAMBORE 

Rajasthan, INDIA

Ranthambore National Park in Rajasthan, India, once a jewel in the golden years of the tiger under India’s Project Tiger, today sits sadly as a shadow of its former self. During my brief visit, the forest guard checkposts were all empty except one which was being used as a ‘rest stop’ by a group of tourists. The entrance gates seemed unofficial, in disrepair, and were reputed to be ‘porous’ through the night. Groups of poachers ran into the woods to hide from our vehicle- all carrying axes for cutting precious wood. Population pressure from without, and even some corridors within, seems overwhelming. It seemed strange to me that it was the dramatic losses of tigers at Ranthambore that so alarmed the world in 1991 yet so very little is being done to prevent the last tiger from disappearing from it’s spectacular fortress, lakes, and forests. Yet there is hope.

I spent my time driving around the park with Belinda Wright and Fateh Singh Rathore. Fateh, former Field Director at Ranthambore, was instrumental in creating Ranthambore when it was a model for success. He has petitioned for permission to set up Tiger Watch, an anti-poaching organization which will patrol the periphery and have government approval. I asked Fateh how many tigers he thought were left. “Six, maybe eight,” he said sadly, “but some cubs have been seen.” His eyes twinkled. Tigers are resourceful, resilient, and reproduce well. If protected and left alone they will come back!

The following morning, Belinda, Fateh, and I were driving down a dusty lane and came upon several vehicles. They gestured frantically for us and, in a gesture of respect, all moved out of the way so Fateh could come forward. There, on the road, a massive tiger was resting in the shade. This was the Bakola tiger, thought to be about 500 pounds. He took one look at us, got up, walked a few yards down the road, then turned into a meadow only to lay down in the open as if to pose for us. I don’t know if my camera or my heart was making more noise. After about 15 minutes he got up, walked toward our jeep, and gave us a disdainful glance of annoyance as he passed in front of the right bumper. We sat for a moment in silence. I looked over at Belinda and she had tears in her eyes. “THAT’S why we can’t give up!” she whispered as the Bakola tiger melted into the forest. 

Sheela Kumari Pant Never Had a Chance

Chitwan, NEPAL           

The tiger came north into Nepal across the dry barren hills, emaciated from hunger and thirst, and entered Shilobas Village on the southern edge of the Madi Valley on the night of April 1st, 1999. The Madi Valley is a small area south of Royal Chitwan National Park in what is known as a ‘buffer zone.’ It contains several small villages dependent on subsistence agriculture and was carved out between the lush forests of Chitwan and the Indian border to the south.           

Pug marks showed that sometime late in the night of April 1 the tiger circled a small hut in search of food. Buffalo meat was inside but the door was secure and the tiger could not get at the meat. Pug marks were found approaching the hut, completely surrounding it, and deep scratch marks were evident on the mud walls of the building. Frustrated and hungry, the tiger headed south back into the hills and attacked the first sign of life.           

At approximately 3:30 AM on April 2nd, 69 year old Sheela Kumari Pant was sleeping next to her husband on a cot on the porch of her home when the tiger pulled her off her bed, dragged her 20 ft. around the corner of the house, and ate most of her head and upper torso.           

Thirty-nine hours later, at 6:30 PM on the evening of April 3rd, still in the full light of day, her widowed husband, Gyan Bahadur Pant and a friend, Dhan Bahadur Romawat, were sitting on the same cot on the same porch. To their utter amazement, the tiger walked right past them, into the adjoining hut, and attacked a sleeping helper named Devi Adhikari. One can only guess what combination of shock, rage, adrenaline, and fear drove these men into action, but they went through the one small door of the hut and chased the tiger away with sticks. It’s a miracle that others were not killed in that small house, but Devi Adhikari later died in a local hospital from the tiger’s attack.           

On the morning of April 4th, a bull was staked in the front yard of a home about 200 yards closer to the foothills across a dry riverbed. The tiger attacked the bull but was repelled by the bigger and stronger animal but the bull died later in the day from a deep wound to the neck.           

Two villagers arrived at Tiger Tops Lodge during the night of April 4th to tell this tale and ask for help. On the morning of April 5th I traveled to Shilobas with Chuck McDougal, Nepal’s renowned tiger expert; Kristjan Edwards, manager of Tiger Tops; and Sukram Kumal, perhaps the best tiger tracker in the world today.           

Upon leaving Shilobas in the afternoon of April 5, all the villagers were excited with the arrival of four huge elephants and two trucks filled with forest officials, guns, and a wooden cage. That night the tiger returned to finish eating the bull, was darted with a tranquilizer gun, and now resides in precarious health at the Kathmandu Zoo.           

A month before, another incident occurred at Kantipur village just 6 kilometers east of Shilobas. A tiger killed two people and was summarily poisoned and buried on the spot.           

It’s difficult to generate local support for tiger conservation when something like this happens. Walking into a village and pulling someone out of their home is not typical tiger behavior. To return to the scene of the crime and walk into another house the very next evening not only tempts fate but speaks of normal tiger behavior gone awry.   McDougal and the Warden of Royal Chitwan National Park both agreed that these tigers must have come north from Valmiki Tiger Reserve in India. Driven by lack of food and water they came through a degraded habitat into an area with no sustainable forest cover or prey base for tigers and where no tigers had been known to live. They came across land which once did sustain lush forests and prey species for tigers.           

Sheela Kumari Pant never had a chance.           

But then, neither did the tiger. 

On Catching a Tiger

Brian K. Weirum
Special to Chicago Tribune

You never know who you’ll meet in a bar in Kathmandu. Sitting in a small hotel with my old friend Karna Sakya, I wondered aloud what I was going to do for the next few weeks before meeting a Swiss friend in the high, remote Rowaling valley west of Mt. Everest. We were planning to cross the 19,300’ Teshi Lapcha Pass from Rowaling to the Khumbu in late November but this was only mid-October.

Karna, long active in wildlife affairs in Nepal, told me a friend would be joining us for dinner. His friend was working on the Smithsonian/World Wildlife Fund Tiger Ecology Project in the jungles of southern Nepal. In walked David Smith.

Throughout the evening David talked of his work in the Nepalese jungle. He was studying the dispersal patterns of the tiger by means of radio telemetry. The great cats were tranquilized, fitted with transmitter collars, and their movements tracked by plane, elephant, land rover, and on foot. The project was to determine if the tiger had enough protected land to assure a viable population in its natural habitat. At the end of the evening, Dave confided that he was behind in his work and needed help. Lights went on and embers began to glow in the recesses of my mind.

The next afternoon I climbed off the small Royal Nepal Airlines Twin Otter as it skidded to a halt on the grass airstrip at Bharatpur in the vast expanse of land known as the Terai. The Terai encompasses the entire southern border area of Nepal that meets the northern border of India. A rich assortment of wildlife is found here, and at one time was home to one of the healthiest populations of malarial mosquitoes. One major reason why Nepal was never colonized by any foreign power.

With the advent of chemical pesticides and international health efforts, malaria was, for a time, completely eradicated in Nepal. This was good the people but bad for wildlife. As the rich, flat land of the Terai became hospitable for humans, people flocked down out of the steep, unproductive hill country and vast areas of jungle and forests were destroyed. This migration seriously disturbed the natural habitat of numerous exotic birds, sloth bear, crocodile, rare gharial, gaur, leopard, the one-horned Indian rhinoceros, and, of course, the tiger and its predominant prey species, the chital (spotted deer), hog deer, barking deer, and the majestic sambar.

The farsighted creation of the Royal Chitwan National Park in 1973 stemmed the tide of habitat destruction and there now exists an abundance of wildlife although by no means free of threats to their existence.

I arrived at the campsite at Saurah after dark to much excitement. A leopard had been seen in the area and I had just crossed several hundred yards of thick brush blissfully ignorant of any danger. Dave greeted me at camp and informed me that we were to take off before dawn the next morning. We were to be in pursuit of a tiger whose pug marks (footprints) had been seen nearby and the bait had already been set.

At 5 am, atop our elephants, we crossed the Rapti River before entering the deep sal forest and 25 ft. high jungle grass. Unlike tiger hunts of old, we rode, not as Kings and Maharajas seated atop stately palanquins, but as a ragtag group of ten clinging to crude burlap pads. Our only support were the loose ropes hanging from our three elephants. Nor were we destined for a comfortable tree house (machan), armed to the teeth while hundreds of wild eyed servants pushed a tiger to its untimely demise. We would be only two, climbing up a tree of our choice, and armed only with one small shotgun carrying a dart filled with the powerful tranquilizer known as phencyclidine.

I had never gone to work on an elephant before and was a little nervous as we lumbered down the steep, sandy riverbank, sliding into the fast moving post-monsoon water which at time reached the chest of the elephants. I marveled at the control the barefooted elephant driver had over this massive beast by mere toe pressure near the skull behind the ears. Left, right, forward, backward, all dictated by toe signals and occasionally confirmed by a whack on the head by a hard stick. The river was crossed and the hunt was on!

The poor water buffalo didn’t have a chance. It had been tied to a post, as bait, just off the dirt road about one hour from camp. The elephants kneeled down for our dismount and it was apparent the tiger had come. What remained of the buffalo was covered with flies and there was the unmistakable smell of death in the air.

Dave and his associate, Prem Bahadur Rai, discussed the strategy for catching the tiger by whispering and animated arm motions. This strategic pantomime was not intended to keep tiger from coming after us, but to prevent it from hearing us and leaving the area. By all means, I thought nervously to myself, let’s keep the tiger real close.

The tiger is a smart and solitary animal which will avoid contact with humans under most circumstances. Indeed, on subsequent forays into the jungle, I came to worry more about wild boar, sloth bears, cobras, pythons, and the dangerously unpredictable rhino.

Such was not the case this day, and I found myself backing in towards the gray wall of the elephants as if their bulk would protect me should a tiger suddenly appear. The grass is so high and dense in the Fall that the light of day barely hits the pathways tunneled out by the animals who live here.

Once it had been established which direction the tiger had taken its meal it became guesswork as to where the tiger was. The optimum situation is that the tiger drags its meal 50 to 100 yards into the dense brush and remains, either eating or sleeping after a good meal.

We climbed back atop the elephants and, as quietly as possible, ventured forth in a wide arc to a point about 500 yds. past the kill. Dave selected a tree which would give him the best view should the tiger come our way. I was designated a tree some 30 yds. behind him and told to see where the tiger goes should the darting process be successful. Standing on the elephant I clumsily climbed up into the tree and made myself as comfortable as possible as the elephant disappeared into the forest.

This darting process is imprecise and fraught with potential error. The responsible approach dictates a clear and unhurried shot. If the tiger is not shot in the thick muscle of the neck, should, or hind quarters, death may occur. By studying the pug marks (footprints) one can get a good idea as to the size and weight of the animal to gauge the amount of drug to be administered. Too great a dose and the animal may die. Too little and it may wander off where it cannot be found. It could then be vulnerable to other animals or to drowning in the water it is normally fond of.

Once safely in our respective perches, the tiger trackers, known from the old days as shikaris, fanned out in a wide V direction stringing loose cotton cloth from bush to bush. This cloth forms a very crude funnel in which to guide the tiger to us. It is hoped that the tiger, once disturbed by the noise that would soon follow, in leaving the area pass close enough under the right tree so that a clear shot could be taken. As I learned several days later, a cornered tiger will leave in any manner it chooses.

What happen next is controlled chaos. The shikaris have strung the ‘beat cloth’ and remounted the elephants out near the kill, or bait site. At a given signal, the begin ‘pushing the beat’ towards us. The elephants, sensing the presence of a tiger, trumpet nervously while crashing down any bush or small tree that gets in their way. The point now is to make as much noise as possible.

This bizarre jungle symphony did not resonate long before I saw Dave stand up quickly and point his gun downward. From my vantage point I heard only a loud “POP”, then a muffled roar, a flurry of movement and wild thrashing off to my left deep down in the grass- then silence. The tiger had fallen.

I climbed out of the tree onto a waiting elephant and we hurried to where the grass had gone still. One of Dave’s assistants yelled that the tiger was there. Almost falling off my elephant I had to fight a combination of panic and excitement as I walked through the dark grass to the nearby voices.

There lying before me was a magnificent female tiger. It took me a few minutes to trust the fact that this animal was really tranquilized and I approached cautiously. She measured 8’6” from head to tail and weighted 350-400 pounds. Her breathing was heavy and uneven and her eyes were wide open, staring as if bewildered. Her fur was short. Tough and bristle like to the direct touch but like the finest Chinese carpet when stroked gently. Her whiskers were long and taut like violin strings.

As a precaution to an adverse reaction to the drug, I continually monitored the tiger’s temperature and cooled her down with buckets of water from a nearby stream. Dave secured around the tiger’s massive neck a collar with a small transmitter powered by a lithium battery and set to a frequency on one our portable receivers. After several hours the work was done and the tiger slept soundly.

We retreated a safe distance as evening approached and waited to assure that nothing went wrong during the tiger’s awakening transition back to a normal life. As I sat there, on top of an elephant, reflecting on what I had just had the rare privilege of experiencing, the great beast awoke, took a few stumbling steps, then slowly blended into the darkness.

 

                                    *                      *                      *

 This is not always the way it would turn out. Two days later, I sat up in a tree waiting for the ‘action’ to begin. Sitting directly above a small stream., I could hear the elephants and shikaris begin their ‘push.’

Idly looking down, I noticed a small orange spot in the grass. Out stepped a baby tiger cub no more than two feet long. Then a rustle in the grass and another cub emerged. And another! I couldn’t believe my eyes. The cubs lapped up the cool stream water oblivious to me. I did nothing to disturb that oblivion!

Foremost in my mind was a story I had heard at camp the night before about a Nepalese researcher, Kirti Man Tamang who had been pulled from a tree by an angry tigress protecting her cubs.

This particular tigress had been darted, collared, and rejoined by her cubs. The researcher had remained in a tree nearby to observe the reunion but was spotted by the mother who clearly wanted to make sure her cubs would not suffer the same fate. [Tigers are in a mood most foul after this humiliating experience. Our particular tigress had found a listening antenna inadvertently left on the ground and we found it the next day, mangled into metal shreds]

Tigers can’t climb trees, but, strengthened by anger, can get up pretty far. One can only imagine what was going through the mind of this poor chap when the tiger, unable to reach him by standing and roaring, retreated 50 yards to get a running start.   One great leap and reach and the man was pulled out of the tree, flesh on one leg ripped to the bone, and knocked unconscious as he fell to the ground with the tiger. Content only to protect her young the tiger left the man alive.

Kirti Man had been about 18 ft. up in his tree and until then had been the accepted margin of safety. I surveyed my perch and decided to suspend all breathing.

The elephants were getting closer and their increasingly frantic trumpeting betrayed the presence of a tiger. Watching the little cubs move off into the dark grass opposite the stream, I barely had time for a sigh when my reverie was shattered by a primordial roar nearly flinging me out of the tree. To this day I cannot adequately describe the power of that sound but the expression ‘blood running cold’ surely must have its origin in an experience like this.

Frozen, I watched the grass move violently off to my right. A large tigress crashed through the beat cloth, exploded through the thick grass, ran across the stream directly beneath me, and disappeared into the darkness behind her cubs.

It was over. My heart was still pounding as the elephants crashed up towards my tree while the men chattered nervously as to the whereabouts of the tiger. She had escaped with her cubs. I had no regrets.

On this day and others, I had been blessed to see, hear, feel, and experience, far more intimately than anyone had a right to expect, life with one of earth’s most magnificent animals. An abiding sense of good fortune has been forever etched within me.