


Out of India
Tracking big cats on safari through the ‘Tiger State’


My guide, Prabhat Verma of
You can go to Africa for cheetahs or lions, but for Bengal tigers, your best bet is the wildlife reserves at the heart of the Indian subcontinent in the so-called Tiger State of
Straddling the Maikal Hills of the Satpura Range, Kanha is a vast landscape of sal tree forests and wide-open savannas that’s a four-hour drive from the nearest airport in the diminutive regional capital of Raipur.
On morning and afternoon safaris the day before, we followed fresh tiger tracks in the park’s talc-soft dirt to dead ends. The spotter in my safari jeep flicked his binoculars left and right, though his ears were doing the real work. He heeded the warning calls of langur monkeys (who scan the perimeter from treetops) and spotted deer (who smell tigers from a mile away) — all to no avail.
We’ve seen some discrete peacocks ambling through the woods, a pair of jackals racing down a meadow and a rare barasingha swamp deer hiding in the brush. We’ve photographed a menagerie of colorful kingfishers and watched termites build sandcastlelike mounds out of the burnt-orange earth. I know deep down this ought to make me happy, that all animals should carry equal clout. But the tiger is such a rare beast; it would be cruel not to get at least one glance at its striped orange robe.
According to the
Kanha was one of the original nine reserves set up under that program (there are now 50), and I’ve come here to witness a rare good news story in global conservation. Preliminary results of India’s latest tiger census suggest that the nation’s tiger population will rise from 2,226 in 2014 to more than 3,000 in 2019.
A fresh round of deer calls sends us racing to a forested ridge like the paparazzi we are with cameras at the ready. I take a big gulp of the crisp morning air, which has the tang of a fresh cut lemon, and wait in silence for something — anything — to happen.
A few restless minutes go by. Just as I’m starting to feel deflated, the tigress appears atop the ridge, flaunting a kind of self-assurance that only apex predators possess. Her muscles tighten with each step as she surveys the land, her coat shining under the low spotlight of the morning sun. She is, by all accounts, Indian royalty.
In the excitement of the moment I’ve somehow missed the larger tiger — her mate — hiding in the brush. She walks over to him, brandishes her 2-inch canines and lies down for the briefest of moments before they retreat into the darkness of the forest. The whole scene lasts all of five minutes, but it’s so cinematic, it feels as if I’ve watched an entire nature special in the flesh.
Back at the
We feel privileged, even if we know we’re hardly alone. Madhya Pradesh historically has had far fewer tourists than the more popular Indian states of Rajasthan or Kerala, but visitor numbers doubled in 2017 following the live-action remake of “The Jungle Book.” With Netflix picking up the storyline in its 2018 feature “Mowgli,” the buzz around India’s languid heartland continues unabated.
Electric with the thrill of a first tiger sighting, we set off on a four-hour drive to
Back at my hotel, the suitably named
Madhya Pradesh has the largest tribal population of any Indian state,
On my final afternoon safari through Bandhavgarh, the sunset is a glorious affair of golden light and crisp air. I feel lucky to have spent a few days far from the crowds in this nation of 1.3 billion. I’m even content that I may not find another tiger — that is, until the tiger finds me.
A local naturalist says the creature lounging in the brush in front of us is a 4-year-old male who must soon fight his dad for this patch of the park or leave for greener pastures. His fate strikes me as harsh, but also surprisingly normal, which, for tigers these days, is kind of a big deal.