Do tiger children have lessons?
Of course they have! Almost all animal children
have. You will remember the lessons in Book I
which the elephant child had to learn. In the
same manner other animal children must learn how to
make a living in the jungle, and also how to avoid
dangers.
Among tiger children, their lessons
begin even when the father and mother are providing
them with the food; for, as I have just told you,
the children must learn at least which part of the
meat to eat, and which not to eat.
But the most important thing they
have to learn is how to catch the prey, and how to
kill it for themselves that is, how to provide
their own food. Their parents teach them to do
that gradually from time to time, in many lessons.
Tiger Cubs Learn to Kill Prey,
After their Parents have Caught It
As they are not yet big enough to
catch the prey, they are first taught how to
kill the prey, after their father or mother
has caught it alive for them. And that is another
wonder of the jungle, and another good quality of
the tiger. If the tiger catches a deer, even the
largest kind of deer, he could kill it at one blow,
so as to eat it at once. But if the tiger is
the father of a young family, he thinks of his family
all the time; he remembers that he must not only provide
his young children with food, but he must also teach
them their lessons.
So when he finds a big red stag, he
jumps upon it, but he does not kill it outright.
Instead, he merely breaks its hind legs, so that the
stag cannot run away. Then he calls the cubs
and the mother tigress. The tiger and tigress
stand aside, and tell their children to kill the stag.
They will not at first show the children how to do
it. The children must try first to find that
out for themselves.
So the cubs first prowl around the
stag, and try to seize it anywhere. But the cubs
cannot get their teeth deep enough into the stag’s
body; and as the stag is still alive, it shakes them
off. The cubs try to seize the stag at other
parts of its body, but each time they fail to hold
on; instead, the stag shakes them off. And if
the cubs dare to come in front of the stag, the stag
can still use its antlers to drive them off.
Then how can the tiger cubs manage
to seize the prey at all with their teeth? Well,
one of the cubs may remember the very first lesson
it had several weeks before: that was to eat
the throat of the prey, because it was the
softest part as I have already described
to you. So it remembers that the throat is the
softest part.
Then that cub comes to the side of
the stag, makes a sudden plunge downward, and seizes
it by the throat. Even then the stag tries to
shake off the cub but the other two cubs
then come to their brother’s help; they also
seize the stag by the throat, one from each side.
Thus the three cubs begin to worry
the prey, that is, they shake it, and pull it, while
their father and mother watch them. The prey holds
up its head and struggles, but gets more and more
exhausted with the weight of the three cubs.
At last the prey is unable to hold up its head any
more. Its head sinks to the ground. Then
the three cubs kill it easily.
Tiger Cubs Take Part in Hunt to Catch Prey
When the cubs are six months old,
they can take part in the actual hunt for the prey.
So they go into the jungle with their father and mother.
When they sight the prey, the cubs stay a little behind,
while the father and mother stalk the prey.
Suppose the prey is an antelope.
You will remember what I told you in Book I, that
an antelope looks like a deer; but it is a little different
from a deer, because an antelope has horns, and a deer
has antlers. Well, the tiger creeps around to
the side, then more and more around, till he gets
behind the antelope.
Meanwhile the tigress creeps around
the opposite way. So when the tiger makes a sudden
jump at the antelope, and the antelope tries to run
away in either direction, the tiger or the tigress
is there to catch it. And meanwhile the cubs
also have crept nearer and nearer, hiding behind shrubs
and bushes. They can take part in catching the
prey by preventing it from escaping in their direction.
Tiger Cubs Learn to Catch Prey by Themselves
“But when do the tiger cubs
actually learn to catch the prey?” you
may ask.
Well, that takes a little longer to
learn. For when the cubs have learned to catch
different kinds of prey wild pigs, wild
sheep, wild goats, deer, antelope, cattle their
education is almost finished, just as in the case
of a boy who has learned to earn his living in several
different ways. So it takes the tiger cubs at
least the next four months, from the age of six months
to ten months, to learn to catch different kinds of
prey, as I shall now describe to you.
In the beginning the cubs learn by
example; that is, they watch and see how their father
or mother catches the prey. Some kinds of prey
are very easy to catch, such as wild pigs or wild
sheep, as they cannot run fast, and are also very
stupid. A tiger can just rush at a wild pig or
a wild sheep, and catch it. So the cubs soon
learn to do the same. And as I have already told
you that wild pigs and wild sheep are the usual food
of tigers, the cubs soon learn to earn their ordinary
living.
But then they have to learn a little
more difficult lesson to catch animals
which are not so easily caught; and these animals supply
them with a more tasty kind of food than just pork
or mutton. These animals may be divided into
two classes.
First, the prey may be weak, but it
can run fast even faster than the tiger.
The deer and the antelope belong to this class.
The second class of prey is just the
opposite; it is strong, but it cannot run fast at
least, not as fast as the tiger. Buffaloes, bullocks,
and all kinds of cattle belong to this class.
In catching these two different kinds
of prey, the tiger or the tigress uses different methods.
First I shall describe to you how a tiger catches
an animal of the first kind, that is, an animal that
is weak, but which can run faster than the tiger,
such as a deer.
Can you think how the tiger does that?
He cannot chase the deer and run it down in
the open country, because the deer can run faster than
the tiger.
“The tiger can hide in the tall
grass near a river, and wait for a deer to come to
drink,” you may say. “Then the tiger
can jump on it.”
That is quite true. And the black
stripes on the tiger’s yellow body make him
appear very much like the tall grass where he is hiding.
So the deer does not notice the tiger, and it often
comes quite close to the tiger to drink and
then the tiger jumps on it and catches it.
But a tiger may also catch a deer
by stalking it. If he sees a deer browsing
at a distance, he tries to creep quietly toward the
deer. He hides behind bushes and thickets every
few minutes, then he creeps on again toward the deer.
He does that very cleverly. If the deer is bent
on feeding, the tiger creeps on for a few yards.
But if for a moment the deer stops feeding, the tiger
hides at once.
In this manner the tiger sometimes
creeps to within a few yards of the deer. Then
he gives a sudden spring and falls on the deer.
If he cannot approach the deer near enough to fall
on it with just a spring, he first makes a swift rush
and then he gives the spring.
When a tiger or a tigress is teaching
the cubs to stalk a prey in that manner, the cubs
of course stay in the rear and hide behind a bush,
and from there they watch. So they see how their
father or mother stalks the prey as I have
just described to you. Of course, they have to
watch their father or mother several times before
they learn that lesson fully.
Now I shall tell you how a tiger catches
prey of the other kind that is, an animal
that is strong, but which cannot run fast, such as
a bullock. The tiger comes toward the prey from
the side or from the back, but never from the front.
Why? Because the prey has horns, and if the tiger
tried to attack it from the front, the prey would gore
the tiger with its horns and perhaps kill the tiger.
So the tiger creeps toward the prey
from the side or the back. As the prey cannot
run very fast, the tiger does not trouble to stalk
it all the way. Instead, the tiger creeps up
to within a hundred yards of the prey; then he gives
a number of quick rushes, till he reaches the prey.
And he is always careful to reach the prey from the
side or the back.
“But if the prey turns in time
and faces the tiger with its horns?” you may
ask.
Then the tiger turns also. He
dodges from side to side. A tiger can always
turn faster than any horned cattle. A tiger may
even come to within a few yards of the prey, and jump
clear over it! Then on landing on the ground,
the tiger can turn at once and reach the prey from
the side. Then he gives a quick blow with his
paw on the neck of the prey. One blow is usually
enough to stun the prey and knock it down.
Sometimes the prey is so frightened
when it first sees the tiger, that it does not try
to face the tiger with its horns at all. Instead,
the prey stands trembling with terror, and lets the
tiger come right up to it from the side. Then
the tiger gets up on his hind legs, places one paw
on the prey’s shoulder, and with the other paw
he gives a terrific blow on its neck.
But if the prey is not too frightened,
and it struggles when the tiger is trying to strike
it, then the tiger uses a different method. He
plunges downward and seizes the prey from underneath
by the throat. He plants his hind legs
firmly on the ground, a little bit away from the side
of the prey. In that way he gets a little more
“leverage,” as it is called.
You have seen a man tilt a heavy box
over on its side by placing a crowbar under it, then
lifting up the crowbar. Well, the tiger acts
somewhat like that. While still holding the prey
by its throat in his jaws, he gives a sudden jerk
upward with his head. In that way the prey loses
its balance and topples over on its side, just like
the box.
When the tiger or the tigress is teaching
the cubs to catch horned cattle in these different
ways, the cubs of course stay a little behind and
watch how their father or mother does it.
So in every case, as you will understand,
the tiger cubs have to learn from their parents how
to get their living in the jungle.