About admin

I'm a writer, academic and photographer currently working on a book on predators. My academic background is in anthropology, literary theory, environmental philosophy, Buddhism and American poetry. I'm an Associate Lecturer for the Open University London and a Visiting Lecturer at Kingston University. I've worked as a trekking and mountain guide throughout the greater ranges from the Karakorum, Tien Shan, Himalaya, Andes and Tibet and have a particular interest in wildlife. I’ve photographed wildlife from seashore to summit and specialise in challenging environments: “that hideous & desolate wilderness,full of wild beasts & wild men”. I also work as a rigger, and industrial rope access technician.

‘The Bison admits of no compromise’

This atmospheric quote is from the redoubtable Captain Forsyth again and The Highlands of Central India who in full Victorian flow dismisses the local name for Bos Gaurus  (Gaur) and insists on calling it the Indian Bison.  Forsyth’s tone is admiring of what he calls

This unconquerable antipathy of the Indian bison to the
propinquity of man (which) is slowly but surely contracting its range,
and probably diminishing its numbers. Gradually cultivation
is extending into the valleys that everywhere penetrate these
hills ; and the grazing of cattle, which extends far ahead of
the regularly settled tracts, is pushing the wild bull before it
into the remotest depths of the hills.

With a characteristic absence of irony he goes on to state at the end of this chapter (largely concerned with hunting) that ; On the whole I think
stalking the mountain bull among the splendid scenery of
these elevated regions, possesses more of the elements of true
sport than almost any other pursuit in this part of India.

Forsyth dismisses several accounts of the ferocity of the Bison as the work of ‘the class of writers who aim rather at sensationalist description rather than sober truth‘ and adds that he found the bison extremely timid. That’s easy enough to  believe when you watch them placidly grazing in the bamboo, but they are huge beasts. They are the largest wild cattle in the world as an adult male can weigh up to a tonne (1000kg). Bafati, my guide, here at Kanha, has had to retrieve the body of a local trampled by a male and has himself been charged whilst in his jeep by a male during the rut. Schaller describes them as noticeably shy and was ‘rarely able to watch them undisturbed’. He also observes that they are the only wild ungulate formidable enough to stand its ground against a tiger. Anecdotal evidence from the guides here suggest that tigers do predate Gaur but only via ambush, which is of course what the tiger evolved to do. In fact the tigers niche as an ambush predator explains why they are so difficult to see, and has been linked to its generally solitary lifestyle, although there has been some intriguing evidence to suggest that they are less solitary than had been assumed.

 On the way out of the park today we came across a huge traffic jam at a nala (stream) where a tiger was dozing in the shade. This was the scene as all of the gypsies tried to get a view of stripes.

 

This is what they saw, a relatively poor view through thick cover, but a definite tiger sighting

Home to wrestle with the complex taxonomy of the woodpeckers of which more later as I still have the aching head.

‘Old man in a Fur Coat’

The guides say that here at Kanha you see one leopard for every ten tigers that you see and for every ten leopards you see a sloth bear. I had a very good sighting of ‘Adam Zad’ (see my previous post) this morning just after entering the park. The bear was hurrying across the track after we disturbed it tearing open a termite mound. It sped off (nothing slothful about it) into the bamboo thicket before peering at us through the foilage. I’d been chatting about bear to two sisters from Scotland (Heather & Diane) in the jeep behind me as we waited for the Park to open. My guide, driver and expert Bafati has had two sightings in the last six months, both of them with me. It was a good sighting but a poor one for photography (or alternatively a poor photographer !) as the bear didn’t hang around long enough to tweak the autofocus past the bamboo that obscured it.It was a privilege to see it, but as Heather and Diane had said that they would rather see a bear than a tiger I rather feel that it was their sighting that I poached ! I’ve posted the poor image above (which I’ve run through a filter that you’ll have to email me for details of ) just to show that you can have the right kit but getting a good image is often about luck and speed. I was standing up in the gypsy, when Bafati saw the bear slammed the anchors on, my big lens which was on the back seat hit the back of my legs and rolled onto the floor (it’s designed to put up with that sort of abuse). I grabbed it, and started shooting and the bear was off into the dense bamboo thicket before I could get critical focus on the eyes. It was all over in under twenty seconds.

I’m not sure about the reason for the Sloth part of the name – as I say they isn’t really anything slothful about them; shambling, slightly scruffy, suspicious and perhaps a little curmudgeonly (if I may be permitted a little anthropomorphisation !). I’m assuming that the Sloth part is because the great curved claws that they use to tear apart Termite mounds are similar to those of Sloths.

This is Forsyth writing in 1872 about the bear;

‘The common black sloth-bear of the plains of India is
very plentiful in the hills on either side of the Narbadd,
between Jubbulpur and Mandla Indeed, there are few parts
of these highlands where a bear may not at any time be
met with. They are generally very harmless until attacked,
living on roots, honey, and insects, chiefly white ants, which
they dig out of their earthen hillocks. The natives call them
adam-zad, or “sons of men/’ and, considering them half
human, will not as a rule molest them. Eeally, their absurd
antics almost justify the idea. Sometimes, however, a bear
will attack very savagely without provocation generally,
when they are come upon suddenly, and their road of
escape is cut off. As a rule, in frequented parts, they do
not come out of their midday retreats, in caves and dense
thickets, until nightfall ; but, in remoter tracts, they may be
met with in the middle of the day.’

Note the fading traces of a bear cult in the name – skinned bears resemble naked human beings – I hasten to add that I’ve no personal knowledge of this but can remember seeing the dancing bears outside the Red Fort at Delhi not too many years ago. Thankfully this horrible practice has been successfully banned.Forsyth’s book is called The highlands of central India : notes on their forests and wild tribes, natural history, and sports (1872) and is available online here – http://archive.org/details/highlandsofcentr00forsrich. It is a wonderful and fascinating account of central India and its natural history, topography and anthropology, if you can get past the obsession with shooting everything that moved. Given the contemporary scarcity of many of the species that Forsyth cheerily blasts away at it does need to be read in its historical and cultural context but they were very different times and no doubt any of us would have thought and acted the same had we been living in that foreign country that is the past.

A more recent account from 1965 is George Schaller’s The Deer and the Tiger which is based on two years that he spent in Kanha. he writes ‘ Sloth bear is uncommon in the park and I encountered solitary individuals on only seven occasions. they were almost wholly nocturnal’. Having seen two in 5 days here I’m feeling very lucky indeed.

Apart from a prolonged period of near constant alarm calls from Chital and Langur – a pretty reliable sign that a Tiger was close, that was it for predators today. There were some good birds however – a beautiful Black-headed Oriole and a couple of pairs of Indian Grey Hornbill. Hornbills are hard to photograph – even the relatively common ones like the Indian Grey and I’ve had various entertaining sessions chasing them round forests trying to get reasonable shots. Ideally you need to be up in the canopy at eye level as otherwise you are shooting up into the trees with all of the attendant delights of juggling a big lens !

 

In a hawkish mood

No cats or predators in Kanha today but a very nice pair of Oriental Honey Buzzards which aren’t actually Buzzards at all but relatives of the kites. Both the Oriental and its European relative (which is a very rare bird indeed in the UK being just at the westernmost edge of their range),look like more aggressive and heavily armoured birds (Hawk Eagles in Asia and the Common Buzzard in Europe) and there is a reason for that; protective camouflage. They both have plumage that is designed to fool raptors such as the Goshawk that will think twice about attacking the larger more aggressive birds. One of my favourite books as a child was T.H.White’s The Once and Future King which is a strange and wonderful tome whose magical depths are barely hinted at in the Disney cartoon (surprise), but White was also a brilliant nature writer and his book The Goshawk, is a haunting account of his own obsession with hawking in a cottage on the Stowe school estate in the 1930′s. White was a romantic manque born out of his time who despaired of humanity- it’s easy to imagine him as a colonial administrator (like his father) in some remote part of the empire finding a sort of peace in the natural world around him. His attempt to train a goshawk in rural Buckinghamshire amounts to an extraordinary heroic rejection of the modern world and one that prefigures his return to the ‘matter of Britain’ in The Once and Future King which he began the following year. The best of White’s work and there is a great deal of it in the four volumes of the Once and Future King, is charged with a wonder for wild nature that ‘sings a pagan creed outworn’, as Wordsworth put it. Indeed for White the world (by which we must read the human world) was always too much with him. This was not a fashionable view at the time, one can only think of his contemporary, the American poet Robinson Jeffers whose lines about a wounded raptor in Hurt Hawks (‘I’d sooner except the penalties kill a man than a hawk’, express a reverence for wild creatures that is easily misread as misanthropic. White is often cited as an inspiration for Harry Potter, which does him a great disservice as I find the latter sentimental,  snobbish and shoddily written in the extreme. I’d agree with Anthony Holden’s inspired put down of the Potter novels as ‘Billy Bunter with broomsticks’  ( his review is here http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2000/jun/25/booksforchildrenandteenagers.guardianchildrensfictionprize2000)  and add my own less-inspired ‘cosy supernatural’ before directing you or the sensitive imaginative child that you are, were, or aspire to be to the The Sword in the Stone.

Stripes

 

One of three males I saw this morning. So much for previously posted nonchalance! We watched this young male on the road briefly before following him as he headed down a drying up nala towards  water. A Langur family group was drinking at the pool as my driver Bafati adroitly positioned us at the ideal viewpoint. The Langur scattered and shot up the trees hurling the characteristic and abusive sounding alarm calls as the tiger padded down to the pool. Looking closely he has a wound on his left fore leg ; which looks like claw marks, presumably from a fight with another tiger. Young males have a hard life, having to disperse from the maternal territory and carve out a new territory. Dominant males will not usually tolerate another male in their territory, which inevitably means conflict either between tigers or with human beings when the young males disperse.

I’ve seen official figures in the park literature of between 73-106 tigers (excluding cubs) in the whole park area (around 2000 sq km, if buffer areas are included) , but that figure is almost certainly wrong. It is based on the 2006 census that used the now discredited pug mark method. Here’s what Ullas Karanath who is probably the world’s leading expert on tigers has to say about that method; ‘ The pugmark census’ was invented in 1966 by Indian forester S.R.Choudhury…it fails to attain its unrealistic goal of measuring the absolute abundance of tigers, on a contry wide basis and because of this three decades of tiger monitoring has basically failed in India, despite being backed by massive investments and the best of intentions’ . (my emphasis). This is from a terrific article (Science deficiency in Conservation Practice , in an even better book by Karanath – The Science of Saving Tigers. I’m grateful to Aditya ‘Dicky’ Singh for directing me to Karanath’s work. Dicky’s excellent blog is at http://www.dickysingh.com/ .

The guides and locals that I’ve spoken to suggest 50 as a more realistic figure. The official park figures for prey animals at Kanha don’t quite add up to the numbers required to sustain the larger end of the estimate (106). The Museum suggests the following figures for 2010;

  1. Chital -26615
  2. Sambar – 3511
  3. Barasingha – 475
  4. Muntjac – 1174
  5. Nilgai – 102
  6. Chousingha – 146
  7. Gaur – 1690
  8. Wild Boar – 8157

Total = 41,870.

Given that the basic biology of an adult tiger means that it needs to kill and eat 50-60 cow or deer sized animals a year to survive, this in turn means that it needs a prey base of 500 animals. Again I’m relying on Ullas Karanath again here for these figures (this time Reconciling conservation with emancipatory politics, in The Science of saving Tigers). In theory that prey base assuming it is accurate and nothing goes wrong could support 83 tigers. The shortfall is presumably made up in domestic animals who are relatively easy prey. I’ve heard figures suggesting that tigers are successful on 2-4 out of 10 hunting attacks which statistic doesn’t include domestic prey. The hunting of domestic prey is a major source of community and tiger conflict. This is an age-old battle that goes back at least to the emergence of agriculture in the Near East although it is fascinating to speculate about the relationship between large carnivores and early hominds. Last time I checked Man the Hunter had been replaced by Man the Scavenger – a slightly less noble phrase. Biblical and Classical references to Lions (all those wonderful extended lion similes in the Illiad but that is a subject for another post ! )  were made by a people who had direct empirical knowledge of the cat and one theory about the near extermination of the Asiatic Lion is that its preferred habitat and hunting strategy was in direct competition with pastoralists. The Tiger, of course is an ambush predator particularly of deer although it will eat most animal prey, and is associated with forests, specifically forest edges. In evolutionary terms it emerged to prey on the deer as they spread out across Asia, from an ancestral homeland somewhere in Asia, in modern day China.Studies of the heartbreakingly recently extinct subspecies of tiger such as the Caspian (1972?) and Javan (1976) suggest that it was the reduction of prey animals that finished them off. There is something unbelievably poignant in the fact that they didn’t quite make it to the 21st century, particularly given that the science now is good enough now to understand why.

And before I sign off with a haunting image of the last of these magnificent cats dying of hunger somewhere in an empty thicket on the Turkmen-Uzbek-Afghan border or deer forest in Java, here is another image from today.

Note the distinctive markings – everyone unique to the individual tiger, which is why camera traps or photos are the only way to count tigers. I have been told in the past, in defence of the pugmark census method that every tiger pug is unique like human fingerprints, but the slight hitch there is that human beings are a bit more cooperative than tigers.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘Man Goes to Man. He is Weeping in the Jungle’.

In my previous post I included this quotation without giving a source. It is of course from the final Mowgli story, The Spring Running’ from Kipling’s The Second Jungle Book. I’ve been pondering over those lines, with their elegiac note as the now -adult Mowgli leaves the forest. As the old half-blind bear Baloo ( which is of course the Hindi word for the sloth bear) puts it ‘who shall question Man in his ways?’. I saw a Sloth Bear yesterday in the Park, just long enough to register the thought that the black object shuffling through the bushes looked like an old man in a badly fitting scruffy fur coat. It’s an easy mistake to make as the wealth of names thrown up by bear cults around the world suggest. Many years ago while a research student I came across a lovely book on the Circumpolar Bear Cult in the Northern Hemisphere by an anthropologist in the 1920′s. I wish I had it now to dip into as it is a treasure trove of curious myth and fable about what traditional cultures call the Big Fellow. Kipling of course has a chilling poem about Adam Zad (Son of Adam) the traditional name for the bear amongst the Kashmiris, which is a barely-veiled warning against Russian Imperialism in Asia. He so disliked Russia that his last will insisted that there should be no investment in Russian stocks by his executors.

I’ve reproduced the first two stanzas below, but should say that I was once charged by a sloth bear protecting her cub in Chitwan in Nepal. Luckily I was in a group and she backed off after a threat display but the speed of the angry mother was terrifying.

 

YEARLY, with tent and rifle, our careless white men go
By the Pass called Muttianee, to shoot in the vale below.
Yearly by Muttianee he follows our white men in -
Matun, the old blind beggar, bandaged from brow to chin.

Eyeless, noseless, and lipless – toothless, broken of speech,
Seeking a dole at the doorway he mumbles his tale to each;
Over and over the story, ending as he began:
“Make ye no truce with Adam-zad – the Bear that walks like a Man!

Tigers

I will no doubt have more to say on this subject but for the record I have yet to see one here in Kanha after four safaris. I can live with that and here is why. Those four days have coincided with ridiculous numbers of visitors in the park. The scenes in the morning have been chaotic with people arriving at three in the morning just to get in. The admin staff at the park entrance at Khatia have shown extraordinary patience and resilience given the crush of people wanting to get in. The demand is now so great that there is a Ticket Verification counter in an attempt to stop the resale of entry tickets. How is that for a model of the basic economics of scarcity. Sadly this is both the future and the reality of Tiger Tourism – ever increasing numbers chasing (and I mean physically chasing ) ever decreasing numbers of charismatic megafauna. I watched a gypsy jeep chase two Gaur calves off the road today in their haste to get a better view. I was mildly inconvenienced as I was trying to take a photo of them at the time but I wondered about why would you bother coming to a National Park if you evidently aren’t that concerned about wildlife except as a backdrop to a nice day out ? Is it all about the tiger? Probably yes. there are an awful lot of visitors who feel that they want their money back if they don’t see the stripes. I don’t which is a good thing as I’m now booked for another two weeks of safaris. I’m very glad to be here and just watching the birdlife or even the light on the sal forest is reason enough to be so. If the next two weeks brings tiger then so be it. I’d just like actually getting inside the park to be a bit less like Pandaemonium which the literate of you out there on ‘tinterweb will know was Milton’s Infernal City from Paradise Lost.

India

I’m currently in India with the rather obsessive plan to get some better tiger photos than I managed last time I was here (January of this year). I’m in the far southeastern corner of Madhya Pradesh on the border with Chhattisgarh a (relatively) newly minted and mostly tribal state sliced off Madhya Pradesh in 2000. Kanha is along with several other parks the old Kipling country, which is usually meant as an allusion to The Jungle Book. I don’t suppose that Rudyard ever made it here, and the ‘real’ Kipling country (if that phrase means anything) is Lahore and parts north. I grew up on Kipling as my great grandfather collected first editions, the red leather bound ones with the elephants head and swastika seal on them. I was fascinated by the juxtaposition of the two images as a child. Even now Kanha is described as ‘the country about which Kipling wrote so vividly’ etc etc. The core of the tale of Mowgli is of a small child reared by wolves(which appears in the early short story In the Rukh) and certainly there are anecdotal reports from the old hunters in Central India, but we are clearly in the realm of myth here. And a very deep well of myth it is too from the hairy man Enkidu in the Babylonian saga of Gilgamesh through Romulus and Remus (the founders of Rome ), and the foliate heads or Green Men that decorate some older English churches to Tarzan of the Apes. I’m struck by the potency of these myths, largely because having been (intellectually) reared by anthropologists at an impressionable age I’m inclined to ask what function does the myth serve. If the Arch Druid/Tribal Headman/Grand Inquisitor of anthropology as a science, Claude Levi-Strauss is correct in his claim that ‘myths are good to think’ , then why this myth and what does it tell us about what it is to be a human being ? Or as Gaugin put it ‘Where do we come from ? What are we ? Where are we going ? Actually the English doesn’t scan as well as the original French which is D’où Venons Nous / Que Sommes Nous / Où Allons Nous. It also omits the question mark and if I was to proffer a semi-poetic translation it would be ‘From Where We Come/ What We Doing/ Where We Going. Aren’t these the questions that we must all of us live ?

Badgers by spycam

It’s been a few weeks since my last post; a rather frantic rush to finish work before I left for India, with the aim of getting some better tiger photos. I did make the promise to cyberspace to let he/she/it know how I got on with the new motion camera. The first one proved to be a dud and had to be sent back; after much grinding of teeth and checking that I hadn’t misread the manual. I hadn’t- this one was atypical and a model of clarity but I had a faulty unit. Back it went and it was another week before I could get it up and running. There are two settings for still photography – timed exposures and motion detection. I tried the former set rather ambitiously at one minute intervals as well as setting the motion detection. I now had 800 near identical shots of a badger sett but nothing animated. I wasn’t much better myself after scrolling through them so managed to set it for the following night with motion detection only. Success – three badgers and a very startled looking fox. I had one more try with again three badgers before I left for India. The aim is to get an idea of how many are occupying the sett and figure out a way to get some proper photos, by which I mean ones that I can blow up and decorate the walls of my storage unit (he says only a trifle ruefully!).

Beavers and Rewilding

The Scottish wildlife trust has just announced that plans to cull/control the breeding population of beaver in the Southern Highlands have been dropped for at least three years. I’ll comment in more detail about this in a longer post but having only ever seen a wild beaver once I think this is very encouraging.

Cats and cameras

Welcome to my blog; thoughts on wildlife, photography,anthropology, literature and philosophy.

By happy coincidence the latest issue of BBC wildlife dropped through the letterbox just as my new remote trophy camera arrived. There is a good feature on the consultation paper about reintroducing the lynx to some of the wilder parts of Britain; mainly the Scottish Highlands and the Southern Uplands. It is probably the most effective way to control the deer problem; if anywhere on the planet typifies Aldo Leopold’s idea that ‘a mountain lives in mortal fear of deer’, it is the Highlands. While it sounds a fantastic idea, there are obviously immense entrenched interests that could scupper any attempt. I’ve argued elsewhere that our perception of normality in natural habitats is skewed by the fact that very few of us in these islands have experienced the possible degrees of complexity of climax ecosystems, what professional ecologists call ‘shifting baselines’. What we see in the Scottish Highlands is an extraordinarily degraded habitat and much of that degradation is due to the huge numbers of deer.  Trees for Life is a brilliant charity up in the Highlands that grapple with the issue. Read more about them here ; http://www.treesforlife.org.uk/about/aboutus.html

The idea that our overcrowded islands could support big cats is a tantalising one and having just come back from a trip to India specifically looking for cats, I’m struck by how special landscapes that still have big predators in them are. There have, of course been rumours floating round for years that there are big cats in Britain. I know two people who claim to have seen them. One is an old friend who lives in Dartmoor and the other is a guy from the Forest of Dean I recently shared a jeep with in Ranthambore National Park, in India.  The problem with eye witness reports is that they are unreliable; our vision is pretty poor at judging size and distance, particularly at dusk and dawn when cats are most active. The recent case of the full scale police alert sparked by a toy tiger in Hampshire (see it here- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXZ_p4RhPF4) is a case in point. So until there is firm evidence (scat, photos etc) I’m skeptical although of course ‘I want to believe’.

As for the trophy camera I’ve been after one of these for a while and plan to use it on a couple of projects this Spring. Firstly there is a badger sett that I’ve been watching now for a few years and while I’ve had some memorable evenings and even managed a few photos, I’ve long wanted to get a better record of how many adults and cubs there are and intend to use this to plan some better photos.Badgers are pretty wary and to get decent views you need to be above the scent line, which in this case means being up in the canopy. And that sounds like a cue for a meeting of the Dangerous Hair-brained Schemes Committee.

I’ll let you know how I get on.