

The friend persisted " All that sounds great, but I don't think I have patience". The funny thing was that my friend is actually a very patient person. She is a typical wonder woman who works, bakes, reads, takes care of her family and runs marathons. As for me, anybody that knows me well will tell you that I am very impatient. I have known to give many a hospital staff lectures on how my time is just as precious as the doctor who makes me wait an hour every single time. It got me thinking that maybe patience is not infinite and very subject specific. The husband who is super patient with our 4 year old will be ready to chew your ear off if you cut lines in a store or honk at him when the traffic signal is red. My father, who is the all time king of patience (trust me, I tested it multiple times) can get irritated with my mom for no reason.
A number of my friends have
recently taken up long distance running and cycling. They run and cycle hundreds of miles. I asked a friend how
she has the discipline to wake up at 4 am every morning to run and train for
marathons and she replied " It has become a passion, plus we don't do it
every day. Mondays are off". I hung on to that bit about Mondays before I
hit the 'bingo' moment. Passion!! You don't need patience to go on wildlife
holidays, you need passion. Passion for seeing and capturing nature in action,
passion for experiencing what one sees on National Geographic channels and
passion for simpler things in life like green forests and blue skies and fresh
air. I hate waiting, but two of my
hobbies, gardening and baking require a lot of it and I am fine with it. Bread
dough takes hours to rise and plants take months to grow but I don't mind it
because the end product is amazing. It is something similar with wildlife. After
periods of nothing, you could end up with an amazing story to show and tell.
That to us is a very compelling reason to go back to the forest. This Diwali,
October 2014, we went to the Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve for a few days. We
stayed at Svasara resort, a small luxury lodge close to the Kolara gate
entrance of the park.
On our very first safari, we saw
a tigress, but it was far away and it pretty much did not count. For the next 4
safaris, we saw nothing....zilch...nada. It was not just us, most jeeps from
our gate saw nothing. Our luck changed on the 5th safari when we saw fresh
pugmarks at the Jamni chowk intersection. The pugmarks were headed on the
hilltop road towards Tadoba lake. We went that way and sure enough, there was our
friend Sam in another jeep asking us to hurry and come. P2, the 4/5 year old
tigress was sitting in the bushes by the side of the road. It was a miracle
they spotted it because it was very well camouflaged by the grass. Then began the waiting game. We
waited for 4 hours in that same spot. The tigress did not budge but
disappointment turned into excitement a few hours later when we later realized
that it had a kill near it - a baby sambar deer. It must have made the kill
early in the morning before the jeeps entered the park at 6 am. It ate its fill
and was resting. With the kill, there was no chance the tiger was moving. Every
jeep in the park heard about it and was there. At one point, I counted 45
jeeps, all lined up. It felt like one of those famous temples where people were
lined up to get a darshan of god.
Jeeps would come, go close, click click,
wow...omg... wow.....and then the next jeep would nudge them to move.
It was actually more fun to watch
human behaviour and judge people rather than seeing the sleeping tiger. "Look
at their clothes. Who wears a bright red salwar with a golden border to a tiger
reserve. OMG...they are lifting their child up in the air to show the
tiger...while the jeep is moving. how stupid. Don't go so close to the tiger,
you silly bozo. Are you seriously trying to take a selfie with a TIGER? Holy
crap". Ok...you are right, that was mean but what else am I
supposed to do for 4 hours. Judging people is such wonderful time pass. While I
was bitching about them non-stop, Saru was displaying Zen like
calmness and was superglued to the camera the entire time. Tiger lifts his
paw...click click click. Tiger licks his paw....click click click.
He finally said "I bet you would do the same thing if you were in that
jeep". I totally took offense and argued with him that I was better than
that. He just smiled at me in a smug-judgey way which meant to say "you-know-I-am-right-but-am-shutting-up'. So I ignored him and started talking to the guide Tulsi and the driver (whom I
tipped handsomely afterwards). They agreed with everything I said and also told
me some cool stories one of which included.....coming face to face with a tiger when they were on foot. What followed was a very dramatically told 'Bhaag Tulsi Bhaag' sequence.
Tulsi is one of the best guides at the Kolara gate. He literally thinks like a
tiger. The minute he sees pugmarks, his mind starts racing....."If he
went into this side of the forest, he will emerge at Kalaamba"...or "He
was last seen at Tadoba Lake, so he must have gone to Panchdhara road or
Cheetal road". His predictions turned out to be right for most of the
guests at the lodge. Even if they are not, he is very entertaining.
Most jeeps from the Moharli gate
left with 45 minutes to go. After the long wait, we were losing hope of seeing
any action and we had just half an hour to get out of the park. Just when it
was time to go back, after 4 hours, the tigress got up and decided it wanted to
continue with its meal, so it woke up and started eating. Then we went all
" click click, WOW...OMG...WOW". We went close enough to hear it pull
the meat, crush the bones and on occasion, it would glance at us the spectators
and give a menacing look. It was surreal hearing and watching it eat the deer. Some
of my friends were able to click pictures of it with blood on its mouth. I have
this not so good video from my phone. In spite of not getting great pictures,
it was an incredible sighting.
That afternoon, we wanted to be
one of the first jeeps through the gate. We waited in the hot sun for 1/2 hour
and were in. We saw pug marks just before the Jamni village. Then at the Jamni
chowk, there were pug marks going towards hilltop and more pug marks towards
Jamun bodi. (See how I am casually throwing in road names like a pro. That is
what happens when you go on 4 safaris and see nothing. You remember useless
trivia) It was like the tigers had a
conference and then left in every direction just to throw us off. Flummoxed, we
decided to take the safe bet and return to the morning's location. The Tigress
was still there and this time it was sleeping inside the bushes. We wanted to
play the waiting game but the forest officer came and shooed us away saying he
was not letting any jeep stay there for more than a quick darshan. Cars were
lining up and we left. At the next intersection, another jeep told us that they
heard alarm calls in Jamun Bodi area.We decided to head that way even though
it was a good 20 minutes ride. Jamun Bodi is my favorite area in this part of
the forest. It has wide sweeping meadows of part-green, part-golden grass. It
is slightly uphill and looks into a lake. We drove up to the view point to see
the lake. The forest was silent. We were scanning the lake to see if there were
any animals in or around it. A bush quail family was in the grass next to our
jeep and I was telling Saru to photograph them. A monkey family was playing in
a tree without any worry, so we sighed and just when we gave up hope, the guide
said "Arre,
yeh dekho, TIGER". We all turned around and saw a beautiful tigress
walking into the meadows. The lighting was perfect, but the grass was too tall.
It walked through the grass and went downhill towards the lake. And then, it
ROARED!! OMG....it was SO COOL!
Tigers do not roar to scare animals (counter intuitive) but they roar to warn other tigers not to enter into their territory. The tigress, then waded into the water and started moving. I was squealing with joy the entire time. The smiles on our faces were as wide as can be. It sat in the water for a little bit and then started coming out. By this time the langur family got petrified and started giving alarm calls. The tiger came out of the water and started climbing uphill.


Samar Deer Alarm Call
Finally, after a good 45 minutes, it disappeared into the woods. What a fantastic sighting.This is what I love, seeing the tiger with no jeeps around. There were 2 jeeps for most of the time until the end. It was just us, the forest and the tiger and what an experience. I can totally go back in time and put up with 4 nothing-safaris to get this amazing experience. We were the only jeep in the resort to have see this tigress and we made it count. Saru quickly downloaded pictures to the computer and copied them to the phone in time for dinner. With his fantastic photos and my flair for dramatic story telling, we were the stars of the night. Rest of the guest surrounded us and oohed and aahed at our pictures. Oh! What fun it was!!
This is a lovely post, Vamsee and you have (or oops, is it Saru?) got some great photos from this trip. I so agree - while some people are just patient about everything (and I hate them!), with most of us, it is about chasing a particular dream or passion. And I am realising that the more I go into the forests, the more I want to go. Each time, i come back saying - V, we should do this more. Maybe we will start to :)
ReplyDeleteI saw the entire episode in my mind's eye Vamsee. Kudos to your great narration.
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Really Good post it is... Spotting a tiger in Tadoba with Tadoba Jeep Safari will give you the best chance to spot the tiger in Tadoba TIger Reserve
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ReplyDeleteArticle Worth Reading. Travel in the forest and waiting for hours to have a glance of the Tigress. It's really amazing and hats off for your passion and patience altogether. I have never been to forest reserves in search of wildlife. It really needs a lot of patience which I don't have. But thanks for your narration. I got a picture of the whole thing in my mind.
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