No regular breeding season—Beliefs and prejudices of the
natives about tigers—Bravery of the "gwalla," or cowherd caste—Clawmarks on
trees—Fondness for particular localities—Tiger in Mr. F.'s howdah— Springing
powers of tigers—Lying close in cover—Incident—Tiger shot with No. 4
shot—Man clawed by a tiger—Knocked its eye out with a sickle—Same tiger
subsequently shot in same place—Tigers easily killed—Instances—Effect of
shells on tiger and buffalo—Best weapon and bullets for tiger—Poisoning
tigers denounced—Natives prone to exaggerate in giving news of
tiger—Anecdote—Beating for tiger—Line of elephants—Padding dead game—Line of
seventy-six elephants—Captain of the hunt—Flags for signals in the
line—"Naka," or scout ahead—Usual time for tiger shooting on the Koosee—Firing
the jungle—The line of fire at night—Foolish to shoot at moving jungle—Never
shoot down the line—Motions of different animals in the grass.
Tigers seem
to have no regular breeding season. As a rule the male and female come
together in the autumn and winter, and the young ones are born in the spring
and summer. All the young tigers I have ever heard of have been found in
March, April, and May, and so on through the rains.
The natives have many singular beliefs and prejudices about
tigers, and they are very often averse to give the slightest information as
to their whereabouts. To a stranger they will either give no information at
all, pleading entire ignorance, or they will wilfully mislead him, putting
him on a totally wrong track. If you are well known to the villagers, and if
they have confidence in your nerve and aim, they will eagerly tell you
everything they know, and will accompany you on your elephant, to point out
the exact spot where the tiger was last seen. In the event of a "find" they
always look for backsheesh even
though your exertions may have rid their neighbourhood of an acknowledged
scourge.
The gwalla, or
cowherd caste, seem to know the habits of the yellow striped robber very
accurately. Accompanied by their herd they will venture into the thickest
jungle, even though they know that it is infested by one or more tigers. If
any member of the herd is attacked, it is quite common for the gwalla to
rush up, and by shouts and even blows try to make the robber yield up his
prey. This is no exaggeration, but a simple fact. A cowherd attacked by a
tiger has been known to call up his herd by cries, and they have succeeded
in driving oft his fierce assailant. Xo tiger -will willingly face a herd of
buffaloes or cattle united for mutual defence. Surrounded by his trusty
herd, the gwalla
traverses
the densest jungle and most tiger-infested thickets without fear.
They believe that to rub the fat of the tiger on the loins,
and to eat a piece of the tongue or flesh, will cure impotency; and tiger
fat, rubbed on a painful part of the. body, in an accepted specific for
rheumatic affections. It is a firmly settled belief, that the whiskers and
teeth, worn on the body, 'will act as a charm, making the wearer proof
against the attacks of tigers. The collar-bone, too, is eagerly coveted for
the same reason.
During the rains tigers are sometimes forced, like others of
the cat tribe, to take to trees. A Mr. Mcl. shot two large full-grown tigers
in a tree at Gunghara, and Baboo of my acquaintance bagged no less
than eight in trees during one rainy season at Rampoor.
Tigers generally prefer remaining near water, and drink a
good deal, the quantity of raw meat they devour being no doubt provocative
of thirst.
The marks of their claws are often seen on trees in the
vicinity of their haunts, and from this fact many ridiculous stories have
got abroad regarding their habits. It has even been regarded by some writers
as a sort of rude test, by winch to arrive at an approximate estimate of the
tiger's size. A tiger can stretch himself out some two or two and a half
feet more than his measurable length. You have doubtless often seen a
domestic cat whetting its claws on the mat, or scratching some rough
substance, such as the bark of a tree; this is often done to clean the
claws, and to get rid of chipped and ragged pieces, and it is sometimes mere
playfulness. It is the same with the tiger, the scratching on the trees is
frequently done in the mere wantonness of sport, but it is often resorted to
to clear the claws from pieces of flesh that may have adhered to them during
a meal on some poor slaughtered bullock. These marks on the trees are a
valuable sign for the hunter, as by their appearance, whether fresh or old,
he can often tell the whereabouts of his quarry, and a good tracker will
even be able to make a rough guess at its probable size and disposition.
Like policemen, tigers stick to certain beats; even when
disturbed, and forced to abandon a favourite spot, they frequently return to
it; and although the jungle may be wholly destroyed, old tigers retain a
partiality for the scenes of their youthful depredations; they are often
shot in the most unlikely places, where there is little or no cover, and one
would certainly never expect to find them; they migrate with the herds, and
retire to the hills during the annual floods, always coming back to the same
jungle when the rains are over.
Experienced shekarries know this trait of the tiger's
character well, and can tell you minutely the colour and general appearance
of the animals in any particular jungle ; they are aware of any peculiarity,
such as lameness, scars, &c., and their observations must be very keen
indeed, and amazingly accurate, as I have never known them wrong when they
committed themselves to a positive statement.
An old planter residing at Sultanpore, close on the Nepaul
border, a noted sportsman and a crack shot, was charged on one occasion by a
large tiger; the brute sprang right off the ground on to the elephant's
head; his hind legs were completely off the ground, resting on the
elephant's chest and neck; Mr. F. retained sufficient presence of mind to
sit close down in his howdah ; the tiger's forearm was extended completely
over the front bar, and so close that it touched his hat. In this position
he called out to his son, who was on another elephant close by, to fire at
the tiger; he was cool enough to warn him to take a careful aim, and not hit
the elephant. His son acted gallantly up to his instructions, and shot the
tiger through the heart, when it dropped down quite dead, to Mr. F.'s great
relief.
Some sportsmen are of opinion, that the tiger when charging
never springs clear from the ground, but only rears itself on its hind legs;
this however is a mistake. I saw a tiger leap right oif the ground, and
spring on to the rump of an elephant carrying young Sam S. The elephant
proved staunch, and remained quite quiet, and Sam, turning round in his
howdah, shot his assailant through the head.
I may give another incident, to show how closely tigers will
sometimes stick to cover; they are sometimes as bad to dislodge as a quail
or a hare; they will crouch down and conceal themselves till you almost
trample on them. One clay a party of the Purneah Club were out; they had
shot two fine tigers out of several that had been seen; the others were
known to have gone ahead into some jungle surrounded by water, and easy to
beat. Before proceeding further it was proposed accordingly to have some
refreshment. The tiffin elephant
was directed to a tree close by, beneath whose shade the hungry sportsmen
were to plant themselves; the elephant had knelt down, one or two boxes had
actually been removed, several of the servants were clearing away the dried
grass and leaves. H. W. S. came up on the opposite side of the tree, and was
in the act of leaping off his elephant, when an enormous tiger got up at his
very feet, and before the astounded sportsmen could handle a gun, the
formidable intruder bad cleared the bushes with a bound, and disappeared in
the thick jungle.
The following adventure bears me out in my remark, that
tigers get attached to, and like to remain in, one place, Mr. F. Simpson, a
thorough-going sportsman of the good old type, had been out one day in the
Koosee dyaras; he had hail a long and unsuccessful beat for a tiger, and had
given up all hope of bagging one that day ; he thought therefore that he
might as well turn his attention to more ignoble game. Extracting his
bullets, he replaced them with No. 1 shot. In a few minutes a peacock got up
in front of him, and he fired. The report roused a very fine tiger right in
front of his elephant; to make tlie best of a bad bargain, he gave the
retreating animal the full benefit of his remaining charge of shot, and
peppered it well. About a year after, close to this very place, O. A. S.
bagged a fine tiger. On examination, the marks of a charge of shot were
found in the flanks, and on removing the pads of the feet, numbers of
pellets of Xo. -i shot were found embedded in them. It was evidently the
animal that had been peppered a year before, and the pellets had worked
their way downwards to the feet.
On another occasion, a man came to the factory where George
was then residing, to give information of a tiger. He bore on his back
numerous bleeding scratches, ample evidence of the truth of his story. While
cutting grass in the jungle, with a blanket on his back, the day being
rainy, he had been attacked by a tiger from the rear. The blanket is
generally Added several times, and worn over the head and back. It is a
thick heavy covering, and in the first onset the tiger tore the blanket from
the man's body, which was probably the means of saving his life. The man
turned round, terribly scared, as may be imagined. In desperation he struck
at the tiger with his sickle, and according to his own account, he succeeded
in putting out one of its eyes. He said it was a young tiger, and his
bleeding wounds, and the persistency with which he stuck to his story,
impressed George, with the belief that he was telling the truth. A search
for the tiger was made. The man's blanket was found, torn to shreds, but no
tiger, although the footprints of one were plainly visible. But some months
after, near the same spot, George shot a half-grown tiger with one of its
eyes gone, which had evidently been roughly torn from the socket. This was
doubtless the identical brute that had attacked the grass-cutter.
It is sometimes wonderful how easily a large and powerful
tiger may be killed. The must vulnerable parts are the back of the head,
through the neck, and broadside on the chest. The neck is the most deadly
spot of all, and a shot behind the shoulder, or on the spine, is sure to
bring the game to bag. I have seen several shot with a single bullet from a
smooth-bore, and on one occasion, George tells me he saw a tigress killed
with a single smooth-bore bullet at over a hundred yards. The bullet was a ricochet, and
struck the tigress below the chest, and travelled towards the heart, but
without touching it. She fell twenty yards from where she had been hit.
Another, which on skinning we found had been shot through the heart, with a
single smooth-bore bullet at a distance of one hundred and fifty yards,
travelled for thirty yards before falling dead. Meiselbach, a neighbour of
mine, shot three tigers successively, on one occasion, with a Xo. 18 Joe
Manton smooth-bore. Each of the three was killed by a single bullet, one in
the head, one in the neck, and one through the heart, the bullet entering
behind the shoulder.
On the other hand, I once fired no less than six Jacob's
shells into a tiger, all behind the shoulder, before I could stop him. The
shells seemed to explode on the surface the moment they came in contact with
the body. There was a tremendous surface wound, big enough to put a pumpkin
into, but very little internal hurt. On another occasion (Apiil 4, 1874),
during one of the most exciting and most glorious moments of my sporting
life-—buffaloes charging the line in all directions, burning jungle all
around us, and bullets whistling on every side—I fired twelve shells
into a large bull before I killed him. As every shell hit him, I heard the
sharp detonation, and saw the tiny puff of smoke curl outward from the
ghastly wound. The poor maddened brute would drop on his knees, stagger
again to his feet, and, game to the last, attempt to charge my elephant. I
was anxious really to test the effect of the Jacob's shell as against the
solid conical bullet, and carefully watched the result of each shot. My
weapon was a beautifully finished No. 12 smooth-bore, made expressly to
order for an officer in the Royal Artillery, from whom I bought it. From
that day I never fired another Jacob's shell.
My remarks about the tiger springing clear off the ground
when charging, are amply borne out by the experience of some of my sporting
friends. I could quote pages, but will content myself with one extract. It
is a point of some importance, as many good old sportsmen pooh-pooh the
idea, and maintain that the tiger merely stretches himself out to his
fullest length, and if he does leave the ground, it is by a purely physical
effort, pulling himself up by his claws.
My friend George writes me: "In several cases I have known
and seen the tiger spring, and leave the ground. In one case the tiger
sprang from fully five yards off. He crouched at the distance of a few
paces, as if about to spring, and then sprang clean on to the head of Joe's tusker. An
eight-feet-nine-inch tigress once got on the head of my elephant, which was
ten feet seven inches in height. Every one present saw her leave the ground.
Once, when after a tiger in small stubble, about six feet high, I saw one
bound over a bush so clean that I could see every bit of him." And so on.
For long-range shooting the rifle is doubtless the best
weapon. The Express is the most deadly. The smooth-bore is the gun for
downright honest sport. Shells and hollow-pointed bullets are the things, as
one sportsman writes me, "for mutilation and cowardly murder, and for
spoiling the skin." Poison is the resource of the poacher, No sportsman
could descend so low. Grant that the tiger is a scourge, a pest, a nuisance,
a cruel and implacable fue to man and beast; pile all the vilest epithets of
your vocabulary on his head, and say that he deserves them all, still he is
what opportunity and circumstance have made him. lie is as nature fashioned
him; and there are bold spirits, and keen sights, and steady nerves enough,
God wot, among our Indian sportsmen, to cope with him on more equal and
sportsmanlike terms than by poisoning lam like a mangy dog. On this point,
however, opinions differ. I do not envy the man who would prefer poisoning a
tiger to the keen delight of patiently following him up, ousting him from
cover to cover, watching his careful endeavours to elude your search;
perhaps at the end of a long and fascinating beat, feeling the electric
excitement thrill every nerve and fibre of your body, as the magnificent
robber comes bounding down at the charge, the very embodiment of ferocity
and strength, the perfection of symmetry, the acme of agility and grace.
Natives are such notorious perverters of the truth, and so
often hide what little there may be in their communications under such
floods of Oriental hyperbole and exaggeration, that you are often
disappointed in going out on what you consider trustworthy and certain
information. They often remind me of the story of the Laird of Logan. He was
riding slowly along a country road one day, when another equestrian joined
him. Logan's eye fixed itself on a hole in the turf bank bonniling the road,
and with great gravity, and In trust-inspiring accents, he said, "I saw a tod (or
fox) gang in there."
"Did you, really?" cried the new comer.
"I did," responded the laird.
"Will you hold my horse till I get a spade?" cried the now
excited traveller.
The laird assented. Away hurried the man, and soon returned
with a spade. He set manfully to work to dig out the fox, and worked till
the perspiration streamed down his face. The laird sat stolidly looking on,
saying never a word; and as he seemed to be nearing the confines of the
hole, the poor digger redoubled his exertions. When at length it became
plain that there was no fox there, he wiped his streaming brow, and rather
crossly exclaimed, "I'm afraid there's no tod here."
"It would be a wonder if there was," rejoined the laird,
without the movement of a muscle, "it's ten years since I saw him gang in
there."
So it is sometimes with a native. He will fire your ardour,
by telling you of some enormous tiger, to be found in some jungle close by,
but when you come to inquire minutely into his story, you find that the
tiger was seen perhaps the year before last, or that it used to
be there, or that somebody else had told him of its being there.
Some tigers, too, are so cunning and wary, that they will
make off long before the elephants have come near. I have seen others rise
on their hind legs just like a hare or a kangaroo, and peer over the jungle
trying to make out one's whereabouts. This is of course only in short light
jungle.
The plan we generally adopt in beating for tiger on or near the Nepaul
border, is to use a line of elephants to beat the cover. It is a fine sight
to watch the long line of stately monsters moving slowly and steadily
forward. Several howdahs tower high above the line, the polished barrels of
guns and rifles glittering
in
the fierce rays of the burning and vertical sun. Some of the shooters wear
huge hats made from the light pith of the solah plant, others have long blue
or white puggrees wound round their heads, in truly Oriental style. These
are very comfortable to wear, but rather trying to the sight, as they afford
no protection to the eyes. For riding they are to my mind the most
comfortable head-dress that can be worn, and they are certainly more
graceful than the stiff unsightly solah hat.
Between every two howdahs ate four or five pad elephants.
These beat up all the intervening bushes, and carry the game that may be
shot. "When a pig, deer, tiger, or other animal has been shot, and has
received its amp
de grace, it
is quickly bundled on to the pad, and there secured. The elephant kneels
down to receive the load, and while game is being padded the whole line
waits, till the operation is complete, as it is bad policy to leave blanks.
Where this simple precaution is neglected, many a tiger will sneak through
the opening left by the pad elephant, and so silently and cautiously can
they steal through the dense cover, and so cunning are they and acute, that
they will take advantage of the slightest gap, and the keenest and best
trained eye will fail to detect them.
In most of our hunting parties on the Koosee, we had some
twenty or thirty elephants, and frequently six or eight howdahs. These
expeditions were very pleasant, and we lived luxuriously. For real sport ten
elephants and two or three tried comrades—not more—is much better. With a
short, easily worked line, that can turn and double, an l follow the tiger
quickly, and dog his every movement, you can get far better sport, and bring
more to bag, than with a long unwieldy line, that takes a considerable time
to turn and wheel, and in whose onward march there is of necessity little of
the silence and swiftness which are necessary elements in successful tiger
shooting.
I have been out with a line of seventy-six elephants and
fourteen howdahs. This was on 16th March 1875.
It was a magnificent sight to see the seventy-six huge brutes in the river
together, splashing the water along their heated sides to cool themselves,
and sending huge waves dashing against the crumbling banks of the rapid
stream. It was no less magnificent to see their slow stately march through
the swaying, crashing jungle. What an idea of irresistible power and
ponderous strength the huge creatures gave us, as they heaved through the
tangled brake, crushing everything in their resistless progress. It was a
sight to be remembered, but, as might have been expected, we found the
jungles almost untenanted. Everything cleared out before us, long ere the
line could reach its vicinity. We only killed one tiger, but next day we-
separated, the main body crossing the stream, while my friends and myself,
with only fourteen elephants, rebeat the same jungle and bagged two.
In every hunt, one member is told off to look after the
forage and grain for the elephants. One attends to the cooking and
requirements of the table, one acts as paymaster and keeper of accounts,
while the most experienced is unanimously elected captain, and takes general
direction of every movement of the line. lie decides on the plan of
operations for the day, gives each his place in the line, and for the time,
becomes an irresponsible autocrat, whose word is law, and against whose
decision there is no appeal.
Scouts are sent out during the night, and bring in reports
from all parts of the jungle in the early morning, while we are discussing chota
haziree, our
early morning meal. If tiger is reported, or a kill has been discovered, we
form line in silence, and without noise bear down direct on the spot. In the
captain's howdah are three flags. A blue flag flying means that only tiger
or rhinoceros are to be shot at. A red flag signifies that we are to have
general firing, in fact that we may blaze away at auy game that may be
afoot, and the white flag shows us that we are on our homeward way. and then
also may shoot at anything we can get, break the line, or do whatever we
choose. On the flanks are generally posted the best shots of the party. The
captain, as a rule, keeps to the centre of the line. Frequently one man and
elephant is sent on ahead to some opening or dry water-bed, to see that no
cunning tiger sneaks away unseen. This vedette is called naka. All
experienced sportsmen employ a naka, and not unfrequently where the ground
is difficult, two are sent ahead. The naka is a most important post, ami the
holder will often get a lucky shot at some wary veteran trying to sneak off,
and may perhaps bag the only tiger of the day. The mere knowledge that there
is an elephant on ahead, w ill often keep tigers from trying to get away.
They prefer to face the known danger of the line behind, to the unknown
danger in front, and in all cases where there is a big party a naka should
be sent on ahead.
Tigers can be, and are, shot on the Koosee plains all the
year round, but the big hunts take place in the months of March, April, and
May, when the hot west winds are blowing, and when the jungle has got
considerably trampled down by the herds of cattle grazing in the tangled
wilderness of tall grass. Innumerable small paths show where the cattle
wander backward and forward through the labyrinths of the jungle. In the
howdah we carry ample supplies of vesuvians. "We light and drop these as
they blaze into the dried grass and withered leaves as we move along, and
soon a mighty wall of roaring flame behind us attests the presence of the
destroying element. We go diagonally up wind, and the flames and smoke thus
surge and roar and curl and roll, in dense blinding volumes, to the rear and
leeward of our line. The roaring of the flames sounds like the maddened surf
of an angry sea, dashing in thunder against an iron-bound coast. The leaping
flames mount up in fiery columns, illuminating the fleecy clouds of smoke
with an unearthly glare. The noise is deafening; at times some of the
elephants get quite nervous at the fierce roar of the flames behind, and try
to bolt across country. The fire serves two good purposes.
It burns up the old withered grass, making room for the fresh
succulent sprouts to spring, and it keeps all the game in front of the line,
driving the animals before us, as they are afraid to break back and face the
roaring wall of flame. A seething, surging sea of flame, several miles long,
encircling the whole country in its fiery belt, sweeping along at night with
the roar of a storm-tossed sea; the flames flickering, swelling, and leaping
up in the dark night, the fiery particles rushing along amid clouds of lurid
smoke, and the glare of the serpent-like line reddening the horizon, is one
of those magnificent spectacles that can only be witnessed at rare intervals
among the experiences of a sojourn in India. Words fail to depict its
grandeur, and the utmost skill of Dore could not render on canvas, the
weird, unearthly magnificence of a jungle fire, at the culmination of its
force and fury.
In beating, the elephants are several yards apart, and,
standing in the hovvdah, you can see the slightest motion of the grass
before you, unless indeed it be virgin jungle, quite untrodden, and perhaps
higher than your elephant; in such high dense cover, tigers will sometimes
lie up and allow you to go clean past them. In such a case you must fire the
jungle, and allow the blaze to beat for you. It is common for young,
over-eager sportsmen, to fire at moving jungle, trusting to a lucky chance
for hitting the moving animal; this is useless waste of powder; they fail to
realise the great length of the swaying grass, and invariably shoot over the
game; the animal hears the crashing of the bullet through the dense thicket
overhead, and immediately stops, and you lose all idea of his whereabouts.
When you see an animal moving before you in long jungle, it should be your
object to follow him slowly and patiently, till you can get a sight of him,
and see what sort of beast he is. Firing at the moving grass is worse than
useless. Keep as close behind him as you can, make signs for the other
elephants to close in j stick to your quarry, never lose sight of him for an
instant, he ready to seize the first moment, when more open jungle, or some
other favourable chance, may give you a glimpse of his skin.
Another caution should be observed. Never fire down the line.
It is astonishing how little will divert a bullet, and a careless shot is
worse than a dozen charging tigers. If a tiger does break back, let him get
well away behind the line, and then blaze at him as hard as you like. It is
particularly unpleasant to hear a bullet come singing and booming down the
line, from some excited dunderhead on the far left or right.
A tiger slouching along in front moves pretty fast, in a
silent swinging trot; the tops of the reeds or grass sway very gently, with
a wavering, side to side motion. A pig rushes boldly through, and a deer
will cause the grass to rock violently to and fro. A buffalo or rhinoceros
is known at once by the crashing of the dry stalks, as his huge frame
plunges along; but the tiger can never be mistaken. When that gentle,
undulating, noiseless motion is once seen, be ready with your trusty gun,
and remove not your eye from the spot, for the mighty robber of the jungle
is before you. |