
No, it’s not Sher Khan, the fearsome tiger from Rudyard Kipling’s Jungle Book - but it’s just about the closest you’ll ever find to a genuine, fair dinkum tiger in the concrete jungle that is a modern metropolis.
I shot this on a Singapore street in December 2007. The huge pavement cafe umbrella was dripping wet from the downpour and I shot this frame specifically to capture the residual raindrops on the dark blue surface. But you can clearly see the word "Tiger" on the left and the corporate emblem for Tiger beer on the right.
When I was a kid growing up in India, a friend of my Dad’s was a shikari, or hunter. And one of my earliest memories of visiting their home was the sight of a tiger-skin, beautifully prepared by a taxidermist from the pelt of the unfortunate animal that he had shot.
Its glassy eyes seemed to fix me as a target and its fangs were so frightening that I could never bring myself to touch them. Now, of course, tigers are a protected species in India and I don’t think there’d be many recreational hunters who would display the cured skin of a big cat.
In my childhood and through to my late teens, we used to spend part of our winter holidays at a place called Hazaribagh - which in Hindi literally means the place of a thousand tigers.
Just the kind of place I’d love to go back to - armed with nothing more lethal than my camera.
This last shot was an advertisement painted on the side of a bus and I thought the colours were great as it went past me - so I had to take a quick shot while it was on the move. It was an interesting exercise, because I tried to compose the shot to exclude other vehicles and pedestrians.
Not often you see a tiger in the city.

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As Always, Great Shots David !
ReplyDeleteHappy Valentine's !
Carol
Your shots are great.
ReplyDeleteAmazing that you were able to capture this photo as the bus went barreling through the city.
ReplyDeleteNice photos David! Very original again.
ReplyDeleteJust remember never to catch one by his tail...or in your case, tale, even.
ReplyDeleteHi David, Nice shot; though I would have preferred to see the royal beast himself. I belong to a family who were shikaris, (long time ago) and I have been around the jungles of Satpuraas - forests near Nagpur. BTW, bagh does mean tiger, but it also means a garden. wondering if Hazaribagh was named after 1000 gardens or 1000 tigers.
ReplyDeleteVery original shots of tigers in the city.
ReplyDeleteWas half expecting you to say that you'd run into one on a safari trek & jumped out to photograph it, just as you did with the grizzy in the Yukon!
Staying Singapore for some years of course we had Tiger as part og our daily consumes, but we also liked the Anchor Beer
ReplyDeleteBut that is may be more RuneE´s department and not Critter
Brilliant shots. Yet again, you do it for critters without a critter!
ReplyDeleteI love cats of all sizes, but I doubt I would touch the fangs of a tiger either. When I was a young child it was foxes and I wouldn't touch them - alive or dead!
Happy Valentines Day Dave, from my end of the world all the way to yours.....
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed this, David. I especially like that last shot of the bus.
ReplyDeleteCome on over and collect an Award :-) Susan xx
ReplyDeleteCome on over and collect an Award :-) Susan xx
ReplyDeleteGreat blog! Your pics are so unique!
ReplyDeleteand not Tony the - either..Lots of new tigers.Heat????
ReplyDelete"fair dinkum tiger in the concrete jungle that is a modern metropolis." made my mind bring up the image in the movie 12 Monkeys. If I was ever to see a real tiger walking the streets, I'd want to hope that I better have my camera handy! With a zoom lens, as I think I'd want to keep my distance. Lazing around the front of QVB in Sydney would be an interesting image.
ReplyDeleteOriginal images again, along with a nicely penned post.
Fun shots and way of telling about your work.
ReplyDeleteAnother very imaginative critter post. Great story, great shots. I would love to go to India one day and see the real tiger.
ReplyDeleteVery clever and cute!
ReplyDeleteDavid,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed seeing the Tiger Beer ads. We hosted a S'pore reunion of friends 3 years ago and I tried my best to get some "Tiger", but no go! By the way, if ever you publish your memoirs of India etc. let me know1 I visited your family site and loved the reading.
Colleen's mom,
Carol
Wonderful photos as always!
ReplyDeleteI am a Camera Critter Fool this week with three blog entries!
http://www.twobarkingdogs.wordpress.com
http://www.onevintagephoto.wordpress.com
http://www.brownstudies.wordpress.com
Loved your take on the CC!
ReplyDeleteThe figures of tiger census for the past few years in India is very disappointing.
Tigers are my favourite animals after horses, then elephants. Hope you had a nice Valentine's day.
ReplyDeleteNow that's what I call a good kind of critter! Cute shot!
ReplyDeleteI love the umbrella - the angle, the drops of water are wonderful
ReplyDeleteLateral thinking again always works for me.
ReplyDeleteYour creativity is endless... that's one of the things I love most about you (along with your wit).
ReplyDelete