By Riaz Sharrif
HELL BREAKS LOOSE
“ We could hear all manners of feral roars , screeches and calls of the countless jungle fauna ... who had been disturbed by Mr. Naidu’s gunshot. Mr. Naidu ordered all of us to assume our positions. The coolies stayed behind him , while Captain Howard remained with the clients and I remained with the cameramen .
We saw a large number of Chital Deer and langur monkeys rush past us . I felt quite tempted to shoot a fine Chital Deer for the pot . However , Chital Deer were not the prize . A man eating Royal Bengal tiger was ... and Mr. Naidu would not take kindly to me partaking in any recreational shooting , while ‘ on the job ‘ . Furthermore , the fleeing Chital Deer and the langur monkeys were a telltale sign. We knew that the Royal Bengal tiger was somewhere nearby , and would soon cross paths with us . Always remember that during a beat , the Herbivores will always flee away from the beaters ( and thus, towards the Shikaris ) at first ... before the Carnivora flee away from the beaters . This is because the Herbivores are fleeing from the Carnivora during the beat . Carnivora shall always stand their ground , until the last possible moment . It is only when the beaters are almost upon them ... that the Carnivora shall make the decision to flee .
True enough , within a few moments ... something the size of an English Shetland Pony sprung out of the long grass . It was a Royal Bengal Tiger .That was the very first time in my life that I had seen a living Royal Bengal tiger so close to me. It was as big as a horse and it’s fangs looked as dangerous as Turkish Kilij sabers . The Royal Bengal tiger bounded right past us , and Mr. Naidu snapped up his Westley Richards .375 H & H Magnum Double Rifle to his shoulder . He fired off two quick shots , which struck the animal right behind the left shoulder . As the wounded Royal Bengal tiger slowed down... the coolies surrounded it with spears . This made any escape for the man eater impossible ... without the Royal Bengal tiger needing to engage the spear wielding coolies . Mr . Naidu approached the Royal Bengal tiger and leveled his Double Rifle at it . He fired two more shots at it, at a range of less than ten feet. The two 300 grain soft nosed Winchester Silvertips tore through the right shoulder of the man eater.. into its heart - lung region . The animal fell to the ground in pain , but was attempting to struggle back to it’s feet once again. Without hesitation , Mr. Naidu snatched up a spear from one of the coolies and impaled the animal to death by stabbing it through the mouth . We all breathed a sigh of relief . The problem animal was no more .
If only this was the case .
Captain Howard was the first person to point out that Mr. Naidu had killed a pregnant Royal Bengal tigress . This possibly could not be the man eater , because the pug marks which had been found around the man eating Royal Bengal tiger’s previous victims were those of a male Royal Bengal tiger. We speculated very quickly that Mr. Naidu had killed the man eater’s mate. Female Carnivora always tend to get flushed out during a beat , sooner than male Carnivora do . And that meant that the real man eater was still lurking around somewhere nearby . The systematic sounds of the beaters were getting louder and louder .
However, Royal Bengal Tigers were not the only thing which one has to worry about , during a beat in much dense forest .
I was near a cameraman when we noticed something rustling about in the thick bush . Hurriedly , raising my 12 Bore William Wellington Greener shotgun to my shoulder ... I kept it trained on the bushes . This proved to be the only thing that saved me and the cameraman from what happened next .
A huge Hunting Leopard , about the size of a calf ... jumped out of the bushes and charged towards us. I waited until the Leopard was less than 13 feet away from us , before firing the left barrel of my shotgun . I could actually hear the sound of the eight slugs slam into the Leopard’s head . But it just kept coming . So it gave it the right barrel ... at a distance of ten feet . The eight slugs slammed into the Leopard’s head and this time ... the animal had dropped. If only it stayed that way . We both thought that the Leopard was dead , but in reality... it was only knocked out . As it slowly began to come to it’s senses , the American female client used her Griffin & Howe Enfield Model 1917 action rifle to shoot the Leopard in the back of the neck . The 300 grain soft nosed Winchester Silvertip broke the spinal column of the Leopard , and this was what had finally killed it . It was a female Hunting Leopard.
I broke open the breech of my shotgun and watched the two empty cartridges fly out of the breech ... before plopping to the ground . I replenished the chambers with two fresh Eley Alphamax LG cartridges , before closing the breech .
A beater came running through the forest towards us , in a panicked state . He told Mr. Naidu and Captain Howard that he had been attacked by a python , which had attempted to strange him from a the branch of a tree . Mr . Naidu accused the beater of being a lazy lying imbecile , who did not properly carry out his duties as a beater . He then told the beater that he would not be receiving the second half of his payment . The beater desperately tried to tell Mr. Naidu that he really was attacked by a python . Mr. Naidu then ( in a fit of rage ) kicked the beater in the stomach .
Captain Howard went and restrained Mr. Naidu and they both began to argue . Captain Howard did not take kindly to striking the villagers or the coolies , and an American client asked Mr. Naidu if there was a possibility that the beater could have been telling the truth .
Being a junior professional Shikari... I was well aware that getting involved in an argument between my superiors was a career wise unsound decision . It was much above my pay grade . So I decided to stay out of it and stay near the cameramen .
We caught some excellent footage of a Hunting Leopard which was pitch black in color ( due to melanism ) . It was not a particularly large Hunting Leopard.
Perhaps , little above five feet in overall length . Suddenly it sensed something dangerous and quickly decided to move off . The cameraman and I stared at the long grass ... wondering what could have possibly driven the Black Hunting Leopard away . And then we saw it .
Crouched within the long grass ... was a Hunting Leopard of unrivaled proportions. And we had the misfortune of locking eyes with it . The animal charged right at us and I acted on pure instinct . Swinging the shotgun up to my shoulder ... I took aim and fired off the left barrel at a distance of 12 feet . My shot was directed at the chest of the Leopard and it was most certainly hit . However , despite the animal dropping to the ground ... it was back up on it’s feet again in a split second . This time , at a distance of seven feet... I fired my right barrel into the chest of the Leopard . At least some of those eight .36 caliber slugs must have penetrated through the Leopard’s chest muscles and into the creature’s heart . Because the Leopard dropped to the ground ... and this time , it was just not getting back up, anymore . I was elated with joy .
I had just killed my very first Hunting Leopard . It was a mature male , about the size of a large English Mastiff . Reloading my shotgun with two fresh Eley Alphamax LG cartridges , the cameraman and I decided to examine the Leopard’s carcass . I decided to go proudly and tell Captain Howard and Mr. Naidu what I had just accomplished . Suddenly , I saw two of our beaters running right past me and the cameraman , in a crazed state . They were loudly screaming , “ Bhago ! Bhago ! Baagh ! Baagh ! ‘ which translates into English as ‘ Run ! Run ! Tiger , Tiger ! ‘ .
From a distance , I could see a huge Royal Bengal tiger charging towards us . It looked to be the size of an English Shire Stallion and seemed to be even more terrifying than the Royal Bengal tigress which Mr. Naidu had killed. It was the man eater . The cameraman decided to do the intelligent thing and began to flee for his life ... running right after the two beaters. I took aim at the charging Royal Bengal tiger with my shotgun . Having seen the unreliable effects of LG Buckshot on Hunting Leopards , at least twice throughout the day... I had absolutely zero illusions about my Eley Alphamax LG cartridges being able to even remotely slow down the Royal Bengal tiger . However , I was determined to not go down without a fight . Thus, as a last ditch effort at defending myself... I fired off both barrels of my shotgun at the man eater’s chest , at a distance of nine feet . The results were quite predictable. The Royal Bengal tiger was not even remotely hurt . In fact , it’s aggression seemingly quadrupled . It gave a threatening snarl and had now selected me as it’s target . I do not think that I ever ran so fast in my career ( or my life ) . I just ran as fast as my legs could carry me . Knowing that the man eater was hot on my heels , I dived into a nearby pond ... hoping to find safe sanctuary from the Royal Bengal tiger. My decision saved my life and the Royal Bengal tiger fortunately abandoned it’s pursuit of me .
Unfortunately , it focused it’s rage upon one of the beaters . The wretched man attempted to climb up a tree ... in order to escape the man eater’s rampage. However , he severely underestimated the ferocity of the Royal Bengal tiger . The enraged animal repeatedly made attempts to claw it’s way up to the tree . Had the beater stayed still ... he would ( in all probability ) have remained completely unharmed . The man eater would have had a great deal of difficulty in reaching the top of the tree . However, to err is human. The beater began to panic , as he saw the Royal Bengal tiger repeatedly attempting to reach him ... and almost succeeding. The terrified beater attempted to climb to a different branch of the tree ... slightly further from the man eater’s reach . This poor decision almost cost the poor man his life.
The tree branch gave away and the man fell to the ground. He screamed in horror ,as the Royal Bengal tiger leapt over him . It swiped him across the chest with it’s razor sharp claws . Fortunately , that was all the man eater could do. A loud gunshot rang out and the man eater dropped dead ... shot through the side of the head . The savior of the beater was Captain Peter Howard . He had used his William Evans .500 NE Double Rifle to send a 570 grain Imperial Chemical Industries Kynoch soft nosed bullet through the man eater’s head . The Captain and I hurriedly attempted to push the carcass of the dead Royal Bengal tiger off of the beater . The poor man was injured very badly . His chest muscles had been torn open quite gruesomely . However , the fortunate thing was that it was only a flesh wound . The Royal Bengal tiger’s swipe had been unable to damage any of the beater’s vital organs ( Such as his heart or lungs ) . The beater would need stitches , but he would survive . Had Captain Howard not been able to intervene in time... I hesitate to think what fate might have befallen that wretched beater.
Our American clients , Mr. Naidu , Captain Howard and I looked at the carcass of the slain Royal Bengal tiger... while our coolies tended to the injured beater . It was a male and there was no shred of doubt ... that this was the man eater .
It was now time to do an autopsy on the two Hunting Leopards and the two Royal Bengal tigers ... which our Shikar party had killed , as well as check the video footage . “
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The Man Eater , shot in the head by a .500 NE 570 grain soft nosed bullet.
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The Male Hunting Leopard , shot twice in the chest with 12 Bore 70 mm Eley Alphamax LG cartridges .
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The Royal Bengal tigress , shot four times ( twice behind each shoulder ) by .375 H & H Magnum 300 grain Winchester Silvertip soft nosed bullets... before having a local spear driven through it’s mouth in order to finish it off.