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John Varty & Tiger Canyon - Printable Version

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RE: John Varty - Pckts - 09-29-2016

Seatao back from 2012






RE: John Varty - Pckts - 09-29-2016

Amy Loureth Worster
Throwback Thursday: there was a time when I could actually carry this guy Khumba in my arms. Needless to say, I'm not going to attempt it again now! He's grown into a beautiful big male tiger with a dark orange coat. He's also recently started hanging out with a young female called Jamez, who happens to be the granddaughter of all four founding tigers (Julie, Ron, Shadow and Seatao).

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author



Khumbas stripe pattern and facial structure looks as though he has a bit of Sumatran in him. I'd guess Sumatran/Amur mix


RE: John Varty - Pckts - 10-04-2016

Cub Khumba chasing a Cheetah


Tiger Canyons: Tiger Diaries - 3 July 2014




Hundreds of years ago in Asia, the tiger would have pirated kills from the cheetah. Sadly today the cheetah is gone and the tiger numbers greatly diminished.
At Tiger Canyons in South Africa, we got a glimpse into that relat...ionship when cheetah Runde came to investigate tiger Kumba and tigress Aurora. Although totally unaware of the danger form the tigers, Runde fortunately turned tail and fled, easily outrunning the tiger.

Pictures by Richard Sheehan
 

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author



RE: John Varty - sanjay - 10-05-2016

This is incredible image.
You can add this image in Big cat interaction thread too.


RE: John Varty - brotherbear - 10-05-2016

From post #1... However I did receive interest from the hunters. If they invested in the land, could they hunt the surplus male tigers, was the first question they asked? 
 
For a large impressive predator which is now on the very edge of extinction, what exactly is a surplus tiger?  


RE: John Varty - sanjay - 10-09-2016

Well here is another newsletter summary of John Varty. This time he shared the outcome of Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) recently held in South Africa. There was some very disturbing decision which proof that money is above all. Read it-

To Trade or Not to Trade

Hello Friends

The CITES Convention held recently in South Africa, has come to an end (Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species). CITES like the law has good intentions but it is man made and hence flawed.

Botswana who has the most elephants of any African country and the best President in the world, were motivating with Kenya, for elephants to be uplifted to Appendix I. This, if achieved, would spell the end of the trade in ivory world wide.
Elephant ivory trade continue cites
*This image is copyright of its original author


Kenya supported Botswana, but South Africa, Namibia and Zimbabwe opposed it. The European Union, USA, Canada, Russia, China, Norway, Korea and Japan also opposed the motivation to Appendix 1 and so elephants were left on Appendix 2. Ivory can continue to be traded. A sad day for elephants indeed.

What I can't understand is how can countries with no elephants affect the vote of the African elephant. Surely African leaders and African people should be responsible for their elephant populations and outsiders should not be allowed to affect the vote.

Tiger Firms in China
*This image is copyright of its original author


The CITES decision to close Tiger Farms in China is to be applauded. However, there can be serious repercussions to this decision. If China does close the Tiger Farms (The Chinese Government is heavily invested in some of the larger tiger farms) then some 6000 tigers on 200 farms will be destroyed.

It is these tigers that supply the lucrative body parts trade in China. Once this population is gone, the pressure will then fall on the remaining wild tigers (about 2 500 in the wild) to supply the body parts trade.

Another source of body parts will be the 8 000 captive lions in South Africa. It is well known that when a lion is shot in a canned hunt, the body parts are shipped via Pretoria or Durban to China. Once they arrive in China, they are relabeled tiger body parts and no one is any the wiser.

My question is if CITES has the power to close the tiger farms, then why didn't they close the captive lion farms in South Africa?

The only explanation is that the South African Government has no desire to close this cancerous industry. This was a golden opportunity. It's a sad day for the thousands of lions pacing up and down in dingy cages across South Africa.

Lion firming on South Africa
*This image is copyright of its original author


Therefore the South African Government's non support of elephants to Appendix 1 and their non support of closing the lion farms in South Africa, sends out a strong and disturbing message world wide. We are more interested in money. We are more interested in trading wild animal parts.

I suggest this is against world trends. In my opinion South Africa has gone from leader to follower and a dismal follower at that. It is no coincidence that two weeks ago South Africa was voted the most corrupt country in the world.

The illegal trade in wild life products ranks fourth behind drugs, arms and human trafficking. Corruption and the illegal trade in wild life products are bedfellows, they are vital to each other's success.

While President Ian Khama has successfully combated poaching by using his army and introduced rhino into Botswana, South Africa has floundered by losing more than 5000 rhinos in the last 5 years.

One would have thought that South Africa would have sought to emulate President Ian Khama, instead they have pursued a route that is unethical and endorses cruelty. I predict that in the long term this will not sustain and in the end will rot from the inside. (By this time many more elephants and lions would have died)

Endangered species, Rhino in south Africa
*This image is copyright of its original author


However, forget about CITES, forget about rules and regulations and the mountains of documents and permits, forged or legal, circulating the globe every day. Forget about the bureaucrats trying to juggle the complex rules and regulations of CITES.

The truth is elephants, lions and tigers compete with human beings. Lions and tigers eat our domestic stock, elephants destroy our crops and eat the grass which could be eaten by our cows. They are competitors for space, food and water.

As human beings we can no longer tolerate this competition. Our population is approaching 10 billion, we need this space to grow food for ourselves. This in a nutshell, is where the game will be played and won or lost.

When I started my tiger project in the year of 2 000, there were 8 000 wild tigers and 40 000 in captivity. Today there are about 2 500 wild tigers and 80 000 in captivity. It does not take rocket science to work out what the end result will be.

"I Do not Take
The Future of the Planet
Or its Endangered Species
For Granted
....
And Neither Should You"

JV, Tiger Canyons, 2016

Tread Lightly on the Earth
JV


RE: John Varty - Pckts - 11-09-2016

Tiger Canyons Safaris


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


JV Images: Predator Hieracky
Because cheetah lose so many kills to rival predators they feed as quickly as they can when they make a kill although there are no rival predtors at Tiger Canyons, Shashe and the cubs still feed immediately.
Tread Lightly On The Earth
JV

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author

JV Images:
Shashe's largest male cub is called Scar Face. He is big, very big.
He successfully ran down a warthog yearling. However when the warthog attacked Scar Face, he was unable to come up with a strategy to kill the warthog.
In time he will gain experience and should be able to catch and kill warthogs of this size.
Tread Lightly On The Earth
JV


*This image is copyright of its original author

Alex Kirichko
October 29, 2015 · Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine ·

The Queen Of The Canyons.
After removing internal fence out, two female tigers Ussuri and Tibo began to increase their territory. Usury is trying to keep more rocky area inside the canyons while Taibo with her three cubs - more flat area outside canyons.
Tigress Ussuri. South Africa, Tiger Canyons. October 2015.
Canon 5Ds, EF 100-400 Mk2 (230 mm), ISO 800, f/5.6, 1/320s.
www.kirichko.net
#wildography


*This image is copyright of its original author

MaVo Tier- und Naturfotografie Marion Vollborn
Tigress Fight

*This image is copyright of its original author

JV Images: Tigers in Trees
After leopard tiger is the second best aboreal cat.
There short powerful legs give them a low centre of gravity.
Here Indira decends the Acacia Karoo tree with a warthog in her mouth.
Tread Lightly On The Earth
JV


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author



*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author



RE: John Varty - Ba Ba Lou - 12-03-2016

(09-29-2016, 11:09 PM)Pckts Wrote: Amy Loureth Worster
Throwback Thursday: there was a time when I could actually carry this guy Khumba in my arms. Needless to say, I'm not going to attempt it again now! He's grown into a beautiful big male tiger with a dark orange coat. He's also recently started hanging out with a young female called Jamez, who happens to be the granddaughter of all four founding tigers (Julie, Ron, Shadow and Seatao).

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author



Khumbas stripe pattern and facial structure looks as though he has a bit of Sumatran in him. I'd guess Sumatran/Amur mix



RE: John Varty - Ba Ba Lou - 12-03-2016

(09-29-2016, 11:09 PM)Pckts  those tigers at Tiger Canyons are the almost extinct South China tigers. seems like these tiger get bigger in "Tiger Canyons" than in their native South China. Magnificent pics. Wrote: Amy Loureth Worster
Throwback Thursday: there was a time when I could actually carry this guy Khumba in my arms. Needless to say, I'm not going to attempt it again now! He's grown into a beautiful big male tiger with a dark orange coat. He's also recently started hanging out with a young female called Jamez, who happens to be the granddaughter of all four founding tigers (Julie, Ron, Shadow and Seatao).

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author



Khumbas stripe pattern and facial structure looks as though he has a bit of Sumatran in him. I'd guess Sumatran/Amur mix



RE: John Varty - Pckts - 12-03-2016

No they aren't @babalou 
They are the normal hybrid (Bengal/Amur) tiger which of course is the reason he wasn't able to get India to back his project, because his cats weren't pure bred.


RE: John Varty - Apollo - 12-03-2016

Nice post @Pckts.


RE: John Varty - Pckts - 12-15-2016

JV Images :
The experiment at Tiger Canyons always produces new behaviour regarding tigers.
"Bird" has formed a coalition with "Sundaban".
Ussuri comes into estrus, Sundaban mates with Ussuri and then he leaves Ussuri to mate with Tibo who is also in estrus.
This allows "Bird", just 24 months old to mate for the first time with Ussuri.
Tread Lightly On The Earth
JV


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author



RE: John Varty - Ba Ba Lou - 12-21-2016

The great John Varty, great conservationist.


RE: John Varty - Pckts - 12-21-2016

(12-21-2016, 03:47 AM)UBa Ba Lou Wrote: The great John Varty, great conservationist.

I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic but he surely is very controversial but I know he cares about big cats, he's devoted his life to them and to Africa. At this point I'd rather see his cats compared to the captive ones we have in the states.


RE: John Varty - Ngala - 12-24-2016

Photo and information credits: Alex Kirichko
The Fight.
South Africa. Tiger Canyons. March 2015.
More about project at http://www.jvbigcats.co.za
www.kirichko.net

*This image is copyright of its original author