Thursday, 22 August 2013
Monday, 19 August 2013
Friday, 16 August 2013
Wilderness Days - True jungle stories as never told before...
Lions in Madhya Pradesh
Yes, you heard it right. If all goes well, Kuno-Palpur Sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh may soon be the new home for Indian Lions after Gir in Gujarat. The forest department of MP has already started the groundwork for the arrival of the king.

In our forthcoming episode of Wilderness Days, we take a close look at Kuno-Palpur, as also various issues connected with this ambitious project.

The episode will also feature the enchanting Nauradehi Sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh.
This sanctuary is full of little secrets, exciting terrain and wildlife to match.
Please switch on for an interesting episode on ‘WILDERNESS DAYS’ this Saturday(17th August) on DD National at 11 am or on DD India on SUNDAY (18th August) at 9.00 hrs. & 16.30 hrs. IST and also on Wednesday (21st August) at 8.30, 16.30 & 23.30 hrs. IST - worldwide.
Thursday, 15 August 2013
Tuesday, 13 August 2013
Wednesday, 7 August 2013
A Spectacular Royal Romance
As far as love stories go — the tales of the
regal feline inhabitants of Ranthambore National Park
continue to be a blockbuster
Text Navin M Raheja
The month of May was coming to its last
days, when the tourists in Zone 4 , Goolarkui
area of Ranthambore Tiger Reserve, were in for a photographer’s delight –
capturing on camera the mating of T25 (Zalim) and T19 (Krishna) tigers. My
niece Sriroopa and Nachiketa Bajaj were also amongst the first lucky witnesses.
Oblivious of the presence of the host of
Gypsies, the mating continued - to be captured on more and more cameras. The
news spread like wildfire and in the next 3 days it was perhaps the most widely
circulated photograph on the internet, facebook and twitter. While more and
more tourists craved to capture these rare scenes, this also caught the
attention of the close by territorial male tiger – T28.
I have been witness to many clashes between
T25 and T28. They have already fought a number of times over T 17, the elder
sister, which has since become extinct from the prime areas of Rajbagh and
Malik Talao. I have seen both the tigers getting injured in these fights, but
invariably T28, despite sustaining injuries, always had an edge and managed to
snatch the female from T25.
It is a different story that T28 was always
unlucky and both T17 and T19 continued to be unfaithful. On the intervening
night of 1st June, T28 reached the mating pair. There was a short
fight in which T25 yielded and T19 meekly accompanied T28 back to home
territory. And tourists of Zone 3 then had a royal spectacle of their
lovemaking in Royal Chhatris of Ranthambore Kindom.
While this phenomenon left a delighted lot
of wildlife photographers, it also spawned several questions that needed to be
analyzed and answered.
1.
While it is believed that
tigers mate between November and April, then why and how was this happening in
the months of May end and June?
2.
Why were two male tigers mating
with one female? (It is a general perception that one male tiger keeps
territorial dominance over 2-4 females).
3.
Why didn’t T17 bring or keep
her cubs in her original home territorial area of Rajbagh and Malik Talao which
falls under Zone 3 and partly Zone 2 of Ranthambore Tiger Reserve?
4.
It is believed that T17 who was
not bearing cubs for over 3 years had her last litter from T25 as she always
kept the cubs in his territory and never brought them to her home territory
which was dominated by T28 as he would have killed these cubs from T25.
In his famous book ‘Maneaters of Kumaon’
the legendary Jim Corbett also mentions that November to March is the mating
season for Tigers. (Please refer to the story of ‘Thak Maneater’)
I had been under the same impression and
overpowered with various readings and theories on tiger behavior, till the time
when on 13th June 2002, my car was charged and mock attacked by two
mating tigers in the Rohini Padao area of Corbett Tiger Reserve.
My subsequent research brought my focus on
the latest studies by the Wildlife Institute of India and that of Rajesh Gopal,
Member Secretary, NTA in Pench Tiger Reserve between March 2008 and December
2011 - in which it was established that although
tigers can mate at any time, breeding is more frequent during November to
April.
On an average tigers give birth to 2-3 cubs
every 2-2 ½ years and sometimes even in 3-4 years. If all the cubs die, second
litter maybe produced within five months also. Gestation is usually 104 – 106
days and births can occur in a cave, a rocky crevice or in dense vegetation.
This episode of Ranthambore Tiger Reserve
between 31st May and 3rd June has established that
extended mating can happen when more than one male tiger is mating with a
female. The matter and actual conception though is still unclear and may become
clear only after four months or so.
While generally it is believed and also
observed that one male tiger may mate with multiple females in the same forest,
but in Ranthambore Tiger Reserve this phenomenon works to the contrary due to
the skewed ratio of females and males.

My busy schedule and commitments as CMD of
Raheja Developers kept me away and I could not take time out to reach
Ranthambore, but young wildlifers of our family - my niece Sriroopa Raheja
Bajaj and Nachiketa Bajaj - kept on sending striking photographs of these
mating tigers.
But my
close wildlifer friend M D Parashar, was even luckier to photograph a rare
sequence of T28 and T19 mating in the royal ruins as if enacting the
reincarnations of the lost love stories of the long forgotten Royal families
that are still sung in the folklores of Rajasthan.
Navin M Raheja, Chairman and
Managing Director, Raheja Developers Limited, is a wildlife enthusiast
and a passionate photographer. In the past 35 years, he has made several
contributions in the field of conservation at various levels. A former
member of Project Tiger’s Steering Committee, under the Ministry of
Environment and Forests, he worked persistently to ensure that the big
cats survive in India. He is also Chairman, Wildlife Conservation
Society of India. One with a holistic vision, Raheja believes that
development and protection of environment can happen simultaneously.
(For more stories and films on wildlife which has run on National Geographic Channel, Doordarshan National channel and Doordarshan (India), please log on to www.raheja.com.)
Friday, 2 August 2013
Good news for the Tiger lovers…
The Center Government has given the nod to grant the Rajaji National Park in Uttarakhand the status of a Tiger Reserve.
It will be the second Tiger Reserve in Uttarakhand after Jim Corbett National Park.
.... the beautiful hilly state of Uttarakhand has much more to offer than Tigers and Elephants. This week lets take you to an unexplored wonder near holy city " Haridwar".
It goes by the name of Jhilmil Jheel Conservation Reserve

The reserve is home to more than 200 swamp deer, commonly known as Barasingha.
Witness this unusual and interesting episode on ‘WILDERNESS DAYS’ this Saturday(3rd August) on DD National at 11 am or on DD India on SUNDAY (4th August) at 9.00 hrs. & 16.30 hrs. IST and also on Wednesday (7th August) at 8.30, 16.30 & 23.30 hrs. IST - worldwide.
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