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B2 and Other Great Tiger Pics from India

Sri Lanka Apollo Away
Bigcat Enthusiast
*****

(01-21-2020, 05:12 PM)Hello Wrote:
(10-26-2016, 11:14 AM)Roflcopters Wrote:
(10-25-2016, 09:45 PM)Majingilane Wrote: From Nature Safari India, The Big four Males of Mukki, Kanha National Park: By Sharad Vats.

An unprecedented story has been developing in the Mukki zone of Kanha National Park. Mukki was never known for male Tigers. It was mostly home to Tigresses with cubs and some odd male Tiger showing up. The limping male (father of Munna), used to spend time in Mukki. After him no one really dominated Mukki until about 3 years back, when Umarpani male started showing a liking for Mukki. He is an unusually big framed Tiger. In particular his head is massive when compared to rest of the Tigers of central India. But lately the big four males of Mukki have become a talk of the Tiger world.

Bheema

*This image is copyright of its original author

But after Umarpani male spent about 2 years dominating Mukki, there was advent of Bheema. Then Rajaram, a.k.a. Kingfisher male, and finally Link 7 since last year started to regularly show up in Mukki. These four male Tigers have developed a liking for Mukki for reasons beyond anyone’s imagination. Actually Mukki is too small a range for four adult Tigers to co-habit. It has become a favorite pass time talk of all Kanha lovers that a deciding battle for supremacy of Mukki is round the corner. Everyone anticipated the monsoon of 2015 to decide this. But when the park reopened in October 2015 these four male Tigers surprised everyone by showing up within the very first week.


In 2014 and then again in 2015 there were a few skirmishes that happened between these Tigers. Some were more than simple alterations. People were still discussing Bheema and Link 7 exchanging some blows near Babathenga waterhole when Umarpani and Kingfisher fight went viral on youtube. I have never seen such a voracious fight between two adult Tigers. Few tourists who saw it had some sleepless nights.

Umarpani

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author

One very interesting point worth mentioning here is how different male Tigers used Babathenga water hole. They had their favorite sides at the water hole where they would sit. And they made sure that they did not overstep their self defined boundary on the water hole.


The fight shifted from Babathenga to Umarjhola in summers of 2016. This time it was Kingfisher and Link 7. 2014 had seen emergence of Link 7 as a promising young Tiger. Also known as Chotta Munna, he was shaping up really well and was predicted to take over the legacy of his father. But his enthusiasm and aggression was no match for the girth of Kingfisher who gave him a run for his life. Kingfisher visited Umarjhola for three days to ensure that Link 7 left his territory. In the subsequent week Link 7 showed up again.

But this time everyone was surprised as Link 7 had seemingly lost a lot of weight. Was it because of the territory that he got confined to, the undulating terrain of Bada Chattapatra, or something else we don’t know, but he was visibly leaner.

Subsequent week, saw Kingfisher male mate with Mahaveer female, and she gave a litter towards the end of summers of 2016. It is predicted that Kingfisher should be able to save his cubs from Mahaveer who in the past has not been a good mother, though a great Tigress. Her past litter with Umarpani male did not survive.

Kingfisher, a.k.a. Rajaram

*This image is copyright of its original author

The best was saved towards the end of the season. This time it was the Minkur anicut which became the Tiger station. Umarpani male, Link 7 male, and Bheema chose to be present at this depleting water hole on the same day at different times of the day and at different locations in Minkur.


Reopening of park in October 2016, will all the Males of Mukki show up this year?

With park scheduled to reopen in less than 10 days, all the Tiger lovers of Kanha have their fingers crossed. Everyone has his favorite Tiger. And everyone is hoping that their favorite male Tiger is alive when the park reopens in October. I am eagerly looking forward to my favorite, the Umarpani male.

Last one year provided me some amazing sightings of Umarpani male, Bheema, and Kingfisher. But i am yet to see the Chotta Munna, a.k.a. Link 7, the son of Munna. I am very eager to capture him on my lens because firstly it will complete my collection of male Tigers of Mukki. And secondly i have been fortunate to click Link 7’s father Munna, and his grand father too, the famous limping male. So getting Link 7 male will give me 3 generations of one line of Tigers of Kanha.

See you soon, you Males of Mukki, or should i say handsome hunks of Kanha.

As a part of a comment below the article, there was this little pice added by Sharad Vats:

Mukki in Kanha never had so many adult dominating male Tigers historically. This is the first time when 3 male Tigers are of same age, and one is about 2 years younger to the rest. There are skirmishes often between the male Tigers for last two years in Mukki, but surprisingly all 4 seem to be in Mukki. Umarpani male tends to go out of the core of Mukki but does return to the core often. This season since the park opened on 1st October 2016, he has not been sighted till writing of this note. The other three male Tigers, i.e. Bheema, Chotta Munna, and Kingfisher have been sighted. I hope and pray that Umarpani male is safe whereever and soon he returns to reclain his territory. He is usually the shy one compared to the other 3. But the largest of the 4 as of now. This year though Chotta Munna has gained in size substantially, and both these Tigers have the same father, legendary Munna, so strong genes, and most likely it is a matter of time before Umarpani male shows up as well.

this was very interesting to read and i hope we get to sight Umarpani soon. also i disagree with Umarpani being the largest. he has the biggest head but kingfisher's overall bulkier imho. bheema is surely large framed, his weight fluctuates a lot so its hard to imagine him as a heavyweight all year long. Chota munna is still growing and he's a beast. my favorite are Kingfisher and Chota Munna out of the four.

Tfs

I believe Uma is dimensionally  larger of all.His son MB2 is at 125 cm over curves which is very tall for a bengal and Uma easily dwarfs him in weight,length and height .Kingfisher is bulkiest of all.@Roflcopters Which is the biggest Bengal in India according to your opinion

Umarpani was never the largest of the 4 males in Mukki. Both Kingfisher and Bheem were larger than Umarpani.
Bheem is the larger framed tiger of them all (taller and longer) and Kingfisher was definitely the heaviest of them all with its insane chest girth.
4 users Like Apollo's post
Reply

India Hello Offline
Senior Member
****

(01-22-2020, 09:22 AM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-21-2020, 05:12 PM)Hello Wrote:
(10-26-2016, 11:14 AM)Roflcopters Wrote:
(10-25-2016, 09:45 PM)Majingilane Wrote: From Nature Safari India, The Big four Males of Mukki, Kanha National Park: By Sharad Vats.

An unprecedented story has been developing in the Mukki zone of Kanha National Park. Mukki was never known for male Tigers. It was mostly home to Tigresses with cubs and some odd male Tiger showing up. The limping male (father of Munna), used to spend time in Mukki. After him no one really dominated Mukki until about 3 years back, when Umarpani male started showing a liking for Mukki. He is an unusually big framed Tiger. In particular his head is massive when compared to rest of the Tigers of central India. But lately the big four males of Mukki have become a talk of the Tiger world.

Bheema

*This image is copyright of its original author

But after Umarpani male spent about 2 years dominating Mukki, there was advent of Bheema. Then Rajaram, a.k.a. Kingfisher male, and finally Link 7 since last year started to regularly show up in Mukki. These four male Tigers have developed a liking for Mukki for reasons beyond anyone’s imagination. Actually Mukki is too small a range for four adult Tigers to co-habit. It has become a favorite pass time talk of all Kanha lovers that a deciding battle for supremacy of Mukki is round the corner. Everyone anticipated the monsoon of 2015 to decide this. But when the park reopened in October 2015 these four male Tigers surprised everyone by showing up within the very first week.


In 2014 and then again in 2015 there were a few skirmishes that happened between these Tigers. Some were more than simple alterations. People were still discussing Bheema and Link 7 exchanging some blows near Babathenga waterhole when Umarpani and Kingfisher fight went viral on youtube. I have never seen such a voracious fight between two adult Tigers. Few tourists who saw it had some sleepless nights.

Umarpani

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author

One very interesting point worth mentioning here is how different male Tigers used Babathenga water hole. They had their favorite sides at the water hole where they would sit. And they made sure that they did not overstep their self defined boundary on the water hole.


The fight shifted from Babathenga to Umarjhola in summers of 2016. This time it was Kingfisher and Link 7. 2014 had seen emergence of Link 7 as a promising young Tiger. Also known as Chotta Munna, he was shaping up really well and was predicted to take over the legacy of his father. But his enthusiasm and aggression was no match for the girth of Kingfisher who gave him a run for his life. Kingfisher visited Umarjhola for three days to ensure that Link 7 left his territory. In the subsequent week Link 7 showed up again.

But this time everyone was surprised as Link 7 had seemingly lost a lot of weight. Was it because of the territory that he got confined to, the undulating terrain of Bada Chattapatra, or something else we don’t know, but he was visibly leaner.

Subsequent week, saw Kingfisher male mate with Mahaveer female, and she gave a litter towards the end of summers of 2016. It is predicted that Kingfisher should be able to save his cubs from Mahaveer who in the past has not been a good mother, though a great Tigress. Her past litter with Umarpani male did not survive.

Kingfisher, a.k.a. Rajaram

*This image is copyright of its original author

The best was saved towards the end of the season. This time it was the Minkur anicut which became the Tiger station. Umarpani male, Link 7 male, and Bheema chose to be present at this depleting water hole on the same day at different times of the day and at different locations in Minkur.


Reopening of park in October 2016, will all the Males of Mukki show up this year?

With park scheduled to reopen in less than 10 days, all the Tiger lovers of Kanha have their fingers crossed. Everyone has his favorite Tiger. And everyone is hoping that their favorite male Tiger is alive when the park reopens in October. I am eagerly looking forward to my favorite, the Umarpani male.

Last one year provided me some amazing sightings of Umarpani male, Bheema, and Kingfisher. But i am yet to see the Chotta Munna, a.k.a. Link 7, the son of Munna. I am very eager to capture him on my lens because firstly it will complete my collection of male Tigers of Mukki. And secondly i have been fortunate to click Link 7’s father Munna, and his grand father too, the famous limping male. So getting Link 7 male will give me 3 generations of one line of Tigers of Kanha.

See you soon, you Males of Mukki, or should i say handsome hunks of Kanha.

As a part of a comment below the article, there was this little pice added by Sharad Vats:

Mukki in Kanha never had so many adult dominating male Tigers historically. This is the first time when 3 male Tigers are of same age, and one is about 2 years younger to the rest. There are skirmishes often between the male Tigers for last two years in Mukki, but surprisingly all 4 seem to be in Mukki. Umarpani male tends to go out of the core of Mukki but does return to the core often. This season since the park opened on 1st October 2016, he has not been sighted till writing of this note. The other three male Tigers, i.e. Bheema, Chotta Munna, and Kingfisher have been sighted. I hope and pray that Umarpani male is safe whereever and soon he returns to reclain his territory. He is usually the shy one compared to the other 3. But the largest of the 4 as of now. This year though Chotta Munna has gained in size substantially, and both these Tigers have the same father, legendary Munna, so strong genes, and most likely it is a matter of time before Umarpani male shows up as well.

this was very interesting to read and i hope we get to sight Umarpani soon. also i disagree with Umarpani being the largest. he has the biggest head but kingfisher's overall bulkier imho. bheema is surely large framed, his weight fluctuates a lot so its hard to imagine him as a heavyweight all year long. Chota munna is still growing and he's a beast. my favorite are Kingfisher and Chota Munna out of the four.

Tfs

I believe Uma is dimensionally  larger of all.His son MB2 is at 125 cm over curves which is very tall for a bengal and Uma easily dwarfs him in weight,length and height .Kingfisher is bulkiest of all.@Roflcopters Which is the biggest Bengal in India according to your opinion

Umarpani was never the largest of the 4 males in Mukki. Both Kingfisher and Bheem were larger than Umarpani.
Bheem is the larger framed tiger of them all (taller and longer) and Kingfisher was definitely the heaviest of them all with its insane chest girth.

I mean dimensionally,Ok Kf and Bhim heavier than Uma.In frame size Uma and Bhim almost same
Reply

United States Rage2277 Offline
animal enthusiast
*****

also mb1,mb2 and mb3 are more than likely kf's cubs they look like him especially the female
Reply

Sri Lanka Apollo Away
Bigcat Enthusiast
*****

(01-22-2020, 11:43 AM)Hello Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 09:22 AM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-21-2020, 05:12 PM)Hello Wrote:
(10-26-2016, 11:14 AM)Roflcopters Wrote:
(10-25-2016, 09:45 PM)Majingilane Wrote: From Nature Safari India, The Big four Males of Mukki, Kanha National Park: By Sharad Vats.

An unprecedented story has been developing in the Mukki zone of Kanha National Park. Mukki was never known for male Tigers. It was mostly home to Tigresses with cubs and some odd male Tiger showing up. The limping male (father of Munna), used to spend time in Mukki. After him no one really dominated Mukki until about 3 years back, when Umarpani male started showing a liking for Mukki. He is an unusually big framed Tiger. In particular his head is massive when compared to rest of the Tigers of central India. But lately the big four males of Mukki have become a talk of the Tiger world.

Bheema

*This image is copyright of its original author

But after Umarpani male spent about 2 years dominating Mukki, there was advent of Bheema. Then Rajaram, a.k.a. Kingfisher male, and finally Link 7 since last year started to regularly show up in Mukki. These four male Tigers have developed a liking for Mukki for reasons beyond anyone’s imagination. Actually Mukki is too small a range for four adult Tigers to co-habit. It has become a favorite pass time talk of all Kanha lovers that a deciding battle for supremacy of Mukki is round the corner. Everyone anticipated the monsoon of 2015 to decide this. But when the park reopened in October 2015 these four male Tigers surprised everyone by showing up within the very first week.


In 2014 and then again in 2015 there were a few skirmishes that happened between these Tigers. Some were more than simple alterations. People were still discussing Bheema and Link 7 exchanging some blows near Babathenga waterhole when Umarpani and Kingfisher fight went viral on youtube. I have never seen such a voracious fight between two adult Tigers. Few tourists who saw it had some sleepless nights.

Umarpani

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author

One very interesting point worth mentioning here is how different male Tigers used Babathenga water hole. They had their favorite sides at the water hole where they would sit. And they made sure that they did not overstep their self defined boundary on the water hole.


The fight shifted from Babathenga to Umarjhola in summers of 2016. This time it was Kingfisher and Link 7. 2014 had seen emergence of Link 7 as a promising young Tiger. Also known as Chotta Munna, he was shaping up really well and was predicted to take over the legacy of his father. But his enthusiasm and aggression was no match for the girth of Kingfisher who gave him a run for his life. Kingfisher visited Umarjhola for three days to ensure that Link 7 left his territory. In the subsequent week Link 7 showed up again.

But this time everyone was surprised as Link 7 had seemingly lost a lot of weight. Was it because of the territory that he got confined to, the undulating terrain of Bada Chattapatra, or something else we don’t know, but he was visibly leaner.

Subsequent week, saw Kingfisher male mate with Mahaveer female, and she gave a litter towards the end of summers of 2016. It is predicted that Kingfisher should be able to save his cubs from Mahaveer who in the past has not been a good mother, though a great Tigress. Her past litter with Umarpani male did not survive.

Kingfisher, a.k.a. Rajaram

*This image is copyright of its original author

The best was saved towards the end of the season. This time it was the Minkur anicut which became the Tiger station. Umarpani male, Link 7 male, and Bheema chose to be present at this depleting water hole on the same day at different times of the day and at different locations in Minkur.


Reopening of park in October 2016, will all the Males of Mukki show up this year?

With park scheduled to reopen in less than 10 days, all the Tiger lovers of Kanha have their fingers crossed. Everyone has his favorite Tiger. And everyone is hoping that their favorite male Tiger is alive when the park reopens in October. I am eagerly looking forward to my favorite, the Umarpani male.

Last one year provided me some amazing sightings of Umarpani male, Bheema, and Kingfisher. But i am yet to see the Chotta Munna, a.k.a. Link 7, the son of Munna. I am very eager to capture him on my lens because firstly it will complete my collection of male Tigers of Mukki. And secondly i have been fortunate to click Link 7’s father Munna, and his grand father too, the famous limping male. So getting Link 7 male will give me 3 generations of one line of Tigers of Kanha.

See you soon, you Males of Mukki, or should i say handsome hunks of Kanha.

As a part of a comment below the article, there was this little pice added by Sharad Vats:

Mukki in Kanha never had so many adult dominating male Tigers historically. This is the first time when 3 male Tigers are of same age, and one is about 2 years younger to the rest. There are skirmishes often between the male Tigers for last two years in Mukki, but surprisingly all 4 seem to be in Mukki. Umarpani male tends to go out of the core of Mukki but does return to the core often. This season since the park opened on 1st October 2016, he has not been sighted till writing of this note. The other three male Tigers, i.e. Bheema, Chotta Munna, and Kingfisher have been sighted. I hope and pray that Umarpani male is safe whereever and soon he returns to reclain his territory. He is usually the shy one compared to the other 3. But the largest of the 4 as of now. This year though Chotta Munna has gained in size substantially, and both these Tigers have the same father, legendary Munna, so strong genes, and most likely it is a matter of time before Umarpani male shows up as well.

this was very interesting to read and i hope we get to sight Umarpani soon. also i disagree with Umarpani being the largest. he has the biggest head but kingfisher's overall bulkier imho. bheema is surely large framed, his weight fluctuates a lot so its hard to imagine him as a heavyweight all year long. Chota munna is still growing and he's a beast. my favorite are Kingfisher and Chota Munna out of the four.

Tfs

I believe Uma is dimensionally  larger of all.His son MB2 is at 125 cm over curves which is very tall for a bengal and Uma easily dwarfs him in weight,length and height .Kingfisher is bulkiest of all.@Roflcopters Which is the biggest Bengal in India according to your opinion

Umarpani was never the largest of the 4 males in Mukki. Both Kingfisher and Bheem were larger than Umarpani.
Bheem is the larger framed tiger of them all (taller and longer) and Kingfisher was definitely the heaviest of them all with its insane chest girth.

I mean dimensionally,Ok Kf and Bhim heavier than Uma.In frame size Uma and Bhim almost same

What you mean by frame size ?
Reply

India Hello Offline
Senior Member
****

(01-22-2020, 03:14 PM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 11:43 AM)Hello Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 09:22 AM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-21-2020, 05:12 PM)Hello Wrote:
(10-26-2016, 11:14 AM)Roflcopters Wrote:
(10-25-2016, 09:45 PM)Majingilane Wrote: From Nature Safari India, The Big four Males of Mukki, Kanha National Park: By Sharad Vats.

An unprecedented story has been developing in the Mukki zone of Kanha National Park. Mukki was never known for male Tigers. It was mostly home to Tigresses with cubs and some odd male Tiger showing up. The limping male (father of Munna), used to spend time in Mukki. After him no one really dominated Mukki until about 3 years back, when Umarpani male started showing a liking for Mukki. He is an unusually big framed Tiger. In particular his head is massive when compared to rest of the Tigers of central India. But lately the big four males of Mukki have become a talk of the Tiger world.

Bheema

*This image is copyright of its original author

But after Umarpani male spent about 2 years dominating Mukki, there was advent of Bheema. Then Rajaram, a.k.a. Kingfisher male, and finally Link 7 since last year started to regularly show up in Mukki. These four male Tigers have developed a liking for Mukki for reasons beyond anyone’s imagination. Actually Mukki is too small a range for four adult Tigers to co-habit. It has become a favorite pass time talk of all Kanha lovers that a deciding battle for supremacy of Mukki is round the corner. Everyone anticipated the monsoon of 2015 to decide this. But when the park reopened in October 2015 these four male Tigers surprised everyone by showing up within the very first week.


In 2014 and then again in 2015 there were a few skirmishes that happened between these Tigers. Some were more than simple alterations. People were still discussing Bheema and Link 7 exchanging some blows near Babathenga waterhole when Umarpani and Kingfisher fight went viral on youtube. I have never seen such a voracious fight between two adult Tigers. Few tourists who saw it had some sleepless nights.

Umarpani

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author

One very interesting point worth mentioning here is how different male Tigers used Babathenga water hole. They had their favorite sides at the water hole where they would sit. And they made sure that they did not overstep their self defined boundary on the water hole.


The fight shifted from Babathenga to Umarjhola in summers of 2016. This time it was Kingfisher and Link 7. 2014 had seen emergence of Link 7 as a promising young Tiger. Also known as Chotta Munna, he was shaping up really well and was predicted to take over the legacy of his father. But his enthusiasm and aggression was no match for the girth of Kingfisher who gave him a run for his life. Kingfisher visited Umarjhola for three days to ensure that Link 7 left his territory. In the subsequent week Link 7 showed up again.

But this time everyone was surprised as Link 7 had seemingly lost a lot of weight. Was it because of the territory that he got confined to, the undulating terrain of Bada Chattapatra, or something else we don’t know, but he was visibly leaner.

Subsequent week, saw Kingfisher male mate with Mahaveer female, and she gave a litter towards the end of summers of 2016. It is predicted that Kingfisher should be able to save his cubs from Mahaveer who in the past has not been a good mother, though a great Tigress. Her past litter with Umarpani male did not survive.

Kingfisher, a.k.a. Rajaram

*This image is copyright of its original author

The best was saved towards the end of the season. This time it was the Minkur anicut which became the Tiger station. Umarpani male, Link 7 male, and Bheema chose to be present at this depleting water hole on the same day at different times of the day and at different locations in Minkur.


Reopening of park in October 2016, will all the Males of Mukki show up this year?

With park scheduled to reopen in less than 10 days, all the Tiger lovers of Kanha have their fingers crossed. Everyone has his favorite Tiger. And everyone is hoping that their favorite male Tiger is alive when the park reopens in October. I am eagerly looking forward to my favorite, the Umarpani male.

Last one year provided me some amazing sightings of Umarpani male, Bheema, and Kingfisher. But i am yet to see the Chotta Munna, a.k.a. Link 7, the son of Munna. I am very eager to capture him on my lens because firstly it will complete my collection of male Tigers of Mukki. And secondly i have been fortunate to click Link 7’s father Munna, and his grand father too, the famous limping male. So getting Link 7 male will give me 3 generations of one line of Tigers of Kanha.

See you soon, you Males of Mukki, or should i say handsome hunks of Kanha.

As a part of a comment below the article, there was this little pice added by Sharad Vats:

Mukki in Kanha never had so many adult dominating male Tigers historically. This is the first time when 3 male Tigers are of same age, and one is about 2 years younger to the rest. There are skirmishes often between the male Tigers for last two years in Mukki, but surprisingly all 4 seem to be in Mukki. Umarpani male tends to go out of the core of Mukki but does return to the core often. This season since the park opened on 1st October 2016, he has not been sighted till writing of this note. The other three male Tigers, i.e. Bheema, Chotta Munna, and Kingfisher have been sighted. I hope and pray that Umarpani male is safe whereever and soon he returns to reclain his territory. He is usually the shy one compared to the other 3. But the largest of the 4 as of now. This year though Chotta Munna has gained in size substantially, and both these Tigers have the same father, legendary Munna, so strong genes, and most likely it is a matter of time before Umarpani male shows up as well.

this was very interesting to read and i hope we get to sight Umarpani soon. also i disagree with Umarpani being the largest. he has the biggest head but kingfisher's overall bulkier imho. bheema is surely large framed, his weight fluctuates a lot so its hard to imagine him as a heavyweight all year long. Chota munna is still growing and he's a beast. my favorite are Kingfisher and Chota Munna out of the four.

Tfs

I believe Uma is dimensionally  larger of all.His son MB2 is at 125 cm over curves which is very tall for a bengal and Uma easily dwarfs him in weight,length and height .Kingfisher is bulkiest of all.@Roflcopters Which is the biggest Bengal in India according to your opinion

Umarpani was never the largest of the 4 males in Mukki. Both Kingfisher and Bheem were larger than Umarpani.
Bheem is the larger framed tiger of them all (taller and longer) and Kingfisher was definitely the heaviest of them all with its insane chest girth.

I mean dimensionally,Ok Kf and Bhim heavier than Uma.In frame size Uma and Bhim almost same

What you mean by frame size ?

Length,height,pelvic girth and rib visibility
Reply

India Hello Offline
Senior Member
****
( This post was last modified: 01-22-2020, 03:33 PM by Hello )

Bheema and Kf are bulky while uma is athletic and well built.
Reply

Sri Lanka Apollo Away
Bigcat Enthusiast
*****

(01-22-2020, 03:21 PM)Hello Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 03:14 PM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 11:43 AM)Hello Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 09:22 AM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-21-2020, 05:12 PM)Hello Wrote:
(10-26-2016, 11:14 AM)Roflcopters Wrote:
(10-25-2016, 09:45 PM)Majingilane Wrote: From Nature Safari India, The Big four Males of Mukki, Kanha National Park: By Sharad Vats.

An unprecedented story has been developing in the Mukki zone of Kanha National Park. Mukki was never known for male Tigers. It was mostly home to Tigresses with cubs and some odd male Tiger showing up. The limping male (father of Munna), used to spend time in Mukki. After him no one really dominated Mukki until about 3 years back, when Umarpani male started showing a liking for Mukki. He is an unusually big framed Tiger. In particular his head is massive when compared to rest of the Tigers of central India. But lately the big four males of Mukki have become a talk of the Tiger world.

Bheema

*This image is copyright of its original author

But after Umarpani male spent about 2 years dominating Mukki, there was advent of Bheema. Then Rajaram, a.k.a. Kingfisher male, and finally Link 7 since last year started to regularly show up in Mukki. These four male Tigers have developed a liking for Mukki for reasons beyond anyone’s imagination. Actually Mukki is too small a range for four adult Tigers to co-habit. It has become a favorite pass time talk of all Kanha lovers that a deciding battle for supremacy of Mukki is round the corner. Everyone anticipated the monsoon of 2015 to decide this. But when the park reopened in October 2015 these four male Tigers surprised everyone by showing up within the very first week.


In 2014 and then again in 2015 there were a few skirmishes that happened between these Tigers. Some were more than simple alterations. People were still discussing Bheema and Link 7 exchanging some blows near Babathenga waterhole when Umarpani and Kingfisher fight went viral on youtube. I have never seen such a voracious fight between two adult Tigers. Few tourists who saw it had some sleepless nights.

Umarpani

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author

One very interesting point worth mentioning here is how different male Tigers used Babathenga water hole. They had their favorite sides at the water hole where they would sit. And they made sure that they did not overstep their self defined boundary on the water hole.


The fight shifted from Babathenga to Umarjhola in summers of 2016. This time it was Kingfisher and Link 7. 2014 had seen emergence of Link 7 as a promising young Tiger. Also known as Chotta Munna, he was shaping up really well and was predicted to take over the legacy of his father. But his enthusiasm and aggression was no match for the girth of Kingfisher who gave him a run for his life. Kingfisher visited Umarjhola for three days to ensure that Link 7 left his territory. In the subsequent week Link 7 showed up again.

But this time everyone was surprised as Link 7 had seemingly lost a lot of weight. Was it because of the territory that he got confined to, the undulating terrain of Bada Chattapatra, or something else we don’t know, but he was visibly leaner.

Subsequent week, saw Kingfisher male mate with Mahaveer female, and she gave a litter towards the end of summers of 2016. It is predicted that Kingfisher should be able to save his cubs from Mahaveer who in the past has not been a good mother, though a great Tigress. Her past litter with Umarpani male did not survive.

Kingfisher, a.k.a. Rajaram

*This image is copyright of its original author

The best was saved towards the end of the season. This time it was the Minkur anicut which became the Tiger station. Umarpani male, Link 7 male, and Bheema chose to be present at this depleting water hole on the same day at different times of the day and at different locations in Minkur.


Reopening of park in October 2016, will all the Males of Mukki show up this year?

With park scheduled to reopen in less than 10 days, all the Tiger lovers of Kanha have their fingers crossed. Everyone has his favorite Tiger. And everyone is hoping that their favorite male Tiger is alive when the park reopens in October. I am eagerly looking forward to my favorite, the Umarpani male.

Last one year provided me some amazing sightings of Umarpani male, Bheema, and Kingfisher. But i am yet to see the Chotta Munna, a.k.a. Link 7, the son of Munna. I am very eager to capture him on my lens because firstly it will complete my collection of male Tigers of Mukki. And secondly i have been fortunate to click Link 7’s father Munna, and his grand father too, the famous limping male. So getting Link 7 male will give me 3 generations of one line of Tigers of Kanha.

See you soon, you Males of Mukki, or should i say handsome hunks of Kanha.

As a part of a comment below the article, there was this little pice added by Sharad Vats:

Mukki in Kanha never had so many adult dominating male Tigers historically. This is the first time when 3 male Tigers are of same age, and one is about 2 years younger to the rest. There are skirmishes often between the male Tigers for last two years in Mukki, but surprisingly all 4 seem to be in Mukki. Umarpani male tends to go out of the core of Mukki but does return to the core often. This season since the park opened on 1st October 2016, he has not been sighted till writing of this note. The other three male Tigers, i.e. Bheema, Chotta Munna, and Kingfisher have been sighted. I hope and pray that Umarpani male is safe whereever and soon he returns to reclain his territory. He is usually the shy one compared to the other 3. But the largest of the 4 as of now. This year though Chotta Munna has gained in size substantially, and both these Tigers have the same father, legendary Munna, so strong genes, and most likely it is a matter of time before Umarpani male shows up as well.

this was very interesting to read and i hope we get to sight Umarpani soon. also i disagree with Umarpani being the largest. he has the biggest head but kingfisher's overall bulkier imho. bheema is surely large framed, his weight fluctuates a lot so its hard to imagine him as a heavyweight all year long. Chota munna is still growing and he's a beast. my favorite are Kingfisher and Chota Munna out of the four.

Tfs

I believe Uma is dimensionally  larger of all.His son MB2 is at 125 cm over curves which is very tall for a bengal and Uma easily dwarfs him in weight,length and height .Kingfisher is bulkiest of all.@Roflcopters Which is the biggest Bengal in India according to your opinion

Umarpani was never the largest of the 4 males in Mukki. Both Kingfisher and Bheem were larger than Umarpani.
Bheem is the larger framed tiger of them all (taller and longer) and Kingfisher was definitely the heaviest of them all with its insane chest girth.

I mean dimensionally,Ok Kf and Bhim heavier than Uma.In frame size Uma and Bhim almost same

What you mean by frame size ?

Length,height,pelvic girth and rib visibility

When it comes to length and height Bheem is the biggest followed by Kingfisher and then Umarpani.
Umarpani is the smallest in length and height compared to Bheem and Kingfisher.
When it comes to chest girth, Kingfisher is the biggest.
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India Hello Offline
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( This post was last modified: 01-22-2020, 03:43 PM by Hello )

(01-22-2020, 03:33 PM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 03:21 PM)Hello Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 03:14 PM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 11:43 AM)Hello Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 09:22 AM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-21-2020, 05:12 PM)Hello Wrote:
(10-26-2016, 11:14 AM)Roflcopters Wrote:
(10-25-2016, 09:45 PM)Majingilane Wrote: From Nature Safari India, The Big four Males of Mukki, Kanha National Park: By Sharad Vats.

An unprecedented story has been developing in the Mukki zone of Kanha National Park. Mukki was never known for male Tigers. It was mostly home to Tigresses with cubs and some odd male Tiger showing up. The limping male (father of Munna), used to spend time in Mukki. After him no one really dominated Mukki until about 3 years back, when Umarpani male started showing a liking for Mukki. He is an unusually big framed Tiger. In particular his head is massive when compared to rest of the Tigers of central India. But lately the big four males of Mukki have become a talk of the Tiger world.

Bheema

*This image is copyright of its original author

But after Umarpani male spent about 2 years dominating Mukki, there was advent of Bheema. Then Rajaram, a.k.a. Kingfisher male, and finally Link 7 since last year started to regularly show up in Mukki. These four male Tigers have developed a liking for Mukki for reasons beyond anyone’s imagination. Actually Mukki is too small a range for four adult Tigers to co-habit. It has become a favorite pass time talk of all Kanha lovers that a deciding battle for supremacy of Mukki is round the corner. Everyone anticipated the monsoon of 2015 to decide this. But when the park reopened in October 2015 these four male Tigers surprised everyone by showing up within the very first week.


In 2014 and then again in 2015 there were a few skirmishes that happened between these Tigers. Some were more than simple alterations. People were still discussing Bheema and Link 7 exchanging some blows near Babathenga waterhole when Umarpani and Kingfisher fight went viral on youtube. I have never seen such a voracious fight between two adult Tigers. Few tourists who saw it had some sleepless nights.

Umarpani

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author

One very interesting point worth mentioning here is how different male Tigers used Babathenga water hole. They had their favorite sides at the water hole where they would sit. And they made sure that they did not overstep their self defined boundary on the water hole.


The fight shifted from Babathenga to Umarjhola in summers of 2016. This time it was Kingfisher and Link 7. 2014 had seen emergence of Link 7 as a promising young Tiger. Also known as Chotta Munna, he was shaping up really well and was predicted to take over the legacy of his father. But his enthusiasm and aggression was no match for the girth of Kingfisher who gave him a run for his life. Kingfisher visited Umarjhola for three days to ensure that Link 7 left his territory. In the subsequent week Link 7 showed up again.

But this time everyone was surprised as Link 7 had seemingly lost a lot of weight. Was it because of the territory that he got confined to, the undulating terrain of Bada Chattapatra, or something else we don’t know, but he was visibly leaner.

Subsequent week, saw Kingfisher male mate with Mahaveer female, and she gave a litter towards the end of summers of 2016. It is predicted that Kingfisher should be able to save his cubs from Mahaveer who in the past has not been a good mother, though a great Tigress. Her past litter with Umarpani male did not survive.

Kingfisher, a.k.a. Rajaram

*This image is copyright of its original author

The best was saved towards the end of the season. This time it was the Minkur anicut which became the Tiger station. Umarpani male, Link 7 male, and Bheema chose to be present at this depleting water hole on the same day at different times of the day and at different locations in Minkur.


Reopening of park in October 2016, will all the Males of Mukki show up this year?

With park scheduled to reopen in less than 10 days, all the Tiger lovers of Kanha have their fingers crossed. Everyone has his favorite Tiger. And everyone is hoping that their favorite male Tiger is alive when the park reopens in October. I am eagerly looking forward to my favorite, the Umarpani male.

Last one year provided me some amazing sightings of Umarpani male, Bheema, and Kingfisher. But i am yet to see the Chotta Munna, a.k.a. Link 7, the son of Munna. I am very eager to capture him on my lens because firstly it will complete my collection of male Tigers of Mukki. And secondly i have been fortunate to click Link 7’s father Munna, and his grand father too, the famous limping male. So getting Link 7 male will give me 3 generations of one line of Tigers of Kanha.

See you soon, you Males of Mukki, or should i say handsome hunks of Kanha.

As a part of a comment below the article, there was this little pice added by Sharad Vats:

Mukki in Kanha never had so many adult dominating male Tigers historically. This is the first time when 3 male Tigers are of same age, and one is about 2 years younger to the rest. There are skirmishes often between the male Tigers for last two years in Mukki, but surprisingly all 4 seem to be in Mukki. Umarpani male tends to go out of the core of Mukki but does return to the core often. This season since the park opened on 1st October 2016, he has not been sighted till writing of this note. The other three male Tigers, i.e. Bheema, Chotta Munna, and Kingfisher have been sighted. I hope and pray that Umarpani male is safe whereever and soon he returns to reclain his territory. He is usually the shy one compared to the other 3. But the largest of the 4 as of now. This year though Chotta Munna has gained in size substantially, and both these Tigers have the same father, legendary Munna, so strong genes, and most likely it is a matter of time before Umarpani male shows up as well.

this was very interesting to read and i hope we get to sight Umarpani soon. also i disagree with Umarpani being the largest. he has the biggest head but kingfisher's overall bulkier imho. bheema is surely large framed, his weight fluctuates a lot so its hard to imagine him as a heavyweight all year long. Chota munna is still growing and he's a beast. my favorite are Kingfisher and Chota Munna out of the four.

Tfs

I believe Uma is dimensionally  larger of all.His son MB2 is at 125 cm over curves which is very tall for a bengal and Uma easily dwarfs him in weight,length and height .Kingfisher is bulkiest of all.@Roflcopters Which is the biggest Bengal in India according to your opinion

Umarpani was never the largest of the 4 males in Mukki. Both Kingfisher and Bheem were larger than Umarpani.
Bheem is the larger framed tiger of them all (taller and longer) and Kingfisher was definitely the heaviest of them all with its insane chest girth.

I mean dimensionally,Ok Kf and Bhim heavier than Uma.In frame size Uma and Bhim almost same

What you mean by frame size ?

Length,height,pelvic girth and rib visibility

When it comes to length and height Bheem is the biggest followed by Kingfisher and then Umarpani.
Umarpani is the smallest in length and height compared to Bheem and Kingfisher.
When it comes to chest girth, Kingfisher is the biggest.

Which one is Kf and uma in the video?



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United States Rage2277 Offline
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from the thumbnail kf is the one on the left @Hello
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( This post was last modified: 01-22-2020, 04:18 PM by Pckts )

Umarpani is definitely more robust than Bheem ever was, frame size is harder to tell.
Umarpani was said to be larger than KF, while he does look smaller in some parts of the video you can see other points like when they are both on their hind legs where Umarpani looks to be as large but Umarpani always had the dense muscle package while KF is softer in comparison.

I wish I could find one with Bheem standing next to DJ but these are the best I can find.

Bheem w/DJ

*This image is copyright of its original author

Uma w/DJ

*This image is copyright of its original author


Bheem 

*This image is copyright of its original author


Uma

*This image is copyright of its original author
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India Hello Offline
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(01-22-2020, 04:05 PM)Rage2277 Wrote: from the thumbnail kf is the one on the left @Hello

Thank you @Rage2277
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Sri Lanka Apollo Away
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( This post was last modified: 01-22-2020, 04:42 PM by Apollo )

(01-22-2020, 03:37 PM)Hello Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 03:33 PM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 03:21 PM)Hello Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 03:14 PM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 11:43 AM)Hello Wrote:
(01-22-2020, 09:22 AM)Apollo Wrote:
(01-21-2020, 05:12 PM)Hello Wrote:
(10-26-2016, 11:14 AM)Roflcopters Wrote:
(10-25-2016, 09:45 PM)Majingilane Wrote: From Nature Safari India, The Big four Males of Mukki, Kanha National Park: By Sharad Vats.

An unprecedented story has been developing in the Mukki zone of Kanha National Park. Mukki was never known for male Tigers. It was mostly home to Tigresses with cubs and some odd male Tiger showing up. The limping male (father of Munna), used to spend time in Mukki. After him no one really dominated Mukki until about 3 years back, when Umarpani male started showing a liking for Mukki. He is an unusually big framed Tiger. In particular his head is massive when compared to rest of the Tigers of central India. But lately the big four males of Mukki have become a talk of the Tiger world.

Bheema

*This image is copyright of its original author

But after Umarpani male spent about 2 years dominating Mukki, there was advent of Bheema. Then Rajaram, a.k.a. Kingfisher male, and finally Link 7 since last year started to regularly show up in Mukki. These four male Tigers have developed a liking for Mukki for reasons beyond anyone’s imagination. Actually Mukki is too small a range for four adult Tigers to co-habit. It has become a favorite pass time talk of all Kanha lovers that a deciding battle for supremacy of Mukki is round the corner. Everyone anticipated the monsoon of 2015 to decide this. But when the park reopened in October 2015 these four male Tigers surprised everyone by showing up within the very first week.


In 2014 and then again in 2015 there were a few skirmishes that happened between these Tigers. Some were more than simple alterations. People were still discussing Bheema and Link 7 exchanging some blows near Babathenga waterhole when Umarpani and Kingfisher fight went viral on youtube. I have never seen such a voracious fight between two adult Tigers. Few tourists who saw it had some sleepless nights.

Umarpani

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author

One very interesting point worth mentioning here is how different male Tigers used Babathenga water hole. They had their favorite sides at the water hole where they would sit. And they made sure that they did not overstep their self defined boundary on the water hole.


The fight shifted from Babathenga to Umarjhola in summers of 2016. This time it was Kingfisher and Link 7. 2014 had seen emergence of Link 7 as a promising young Tiger. Also known as Chotta Munna, he was shaping up really well and was predicted to take over the legacy of his father. But his enthusiasm and aggression was no match for the girth of Kingfisher who gave him a run for his life. Kingfisher visited Umarjhola for three days to ensure that Link 7 left his territory. In the subsequent week Link 7 showed up again.

But this time everyone was surprised as Link 7 had seemingly lost a lot of weight. Was it because of the territory that he got confined to, the undulating terrain of Bada Chattapatra, or something else we don’t know, but he was visibly leaner.

Subsequent week, saw Kingfisher male mate with Mahaveer female, and she gave a litter towards the end of summers of 2016. It is predicted that Kingfisher should be able to save his cubs from Mahaveer who in the past has not been a good mother, though a great Tigress. Her past litter with Umarpani male did not survive.

Kingfisher, a.k.a. Rajaram

*This image is copyright of its original author

The best was saved towards the end of the season. This time it was the Minkur anicut which became the Tiger station. Umarpani male, Link 7 male, and Bheema chose to be present at this depleting water hole on the same day at different times of the day and at different locations in Minkur.


Reopening of park in October 2016, will all the Males of Mukki show up this year?

With park scheduled to reopen in less than 10 days, all the Tiger lovers of Kanha have their fingers crossed. Everyone has his favorite Tiger. And everyone is hoping that their favorite male Tiger is alive when the park reopens in October. I am eagerly looking forward to my favorite, the Umarpani male.

Last one year provided me some amazing sightings of Umarpani male, Bheema, and Kingfisher. But i am yet to see the Chotta Munna, a.k.a. Link 7, the son of Munna. I am very eager to capture him on my lens because firstly it will complete my collection of male Tigers of Mukki. And secondly i have been fortunate to click Link 7’s father Munna, and his grand father too, the famous limping male. So getting Link 7 male will give me 3 generations of one line of Tigers of Kanha.

See you soon, you Males of Mukki, or should i say handsome hunks of Kanha.

As a part of a comment below the article, there was this little pice added by Sharad Vats:

Mukki in Kanha never had so many adult dominating male Tigers historically. This is the first time when 3 male Tigers are of same age, and one is about 2 years younger to the rest. There are skirmishes often between the male Tigers for last two years in Mukki, but surprisingly all 4 seem to be in Mukki. Umarpani male tends to go out of the core of Mukki but does return to the core often. This season since the park opened on 1st October 2016, he has not been sighted till writing of this note. The other three male Tigers, i.e. Bheema, Chotta Munna, and Kingfisher have been sighted. I hope and pray that Umarpani male is safe whereever and soon he returns to reclain his territory. He is usually the shy one compared to the other 3. But the largest of the 4 as of now. This year though Chotta Munna has gained in size substantially, and both these Tigers have the same father, legendary Munna, so strong genes, and most likely it is a matter of time before Umarpani male shows up as well.

this was very interesting to read and i hope we get to sight Umarpani soon. also i disagree with Umarpani being the largest. he has the biggest head but kingfisher's overall bulkier imho. bheema is surely large framed, his weight fluctuates a lot so its hard to imagine him as a heavyweight all year long. Chota munna is still growing and he's a beast. my favorite are Kingfisher and Chota Munna out of the four.

Tfs

I believe Uma is dimensionally  larger of all.His son MB2 is at 125 cm over curves which is very tall for a bengal and Uma easily dwarfs him in weight,length and height .Kingfisher is bulkiest of all.@Roflcopters Which is the biggest Bengal in India according to your opinion

Umarpani was never the largest of the 4 males in Mukki. Both Kingfisher and Bheem were larger than Umarpani.
Bheem is the larger framed tiger of them all (taller and longer) and Kingfisher was definitely the heaviest of them all with its insane chest girth.

I mean dimensionally,Ok Kf and Bhim heavier than Uma.In frame size Uma and Bhim almost same

What you mean by frame size ?

Length,height,pelvic girth and rib visibility

When it comes to length and height Bheem is the biggest followed by Kingfisher and then Umarpani.
Umarpani is the smallest in length and height compared to Bheem and Kingfisher.
When it comes to chest girth, Kingfisher is the biggest.

Which one is Kf and uma in the video?




Actually there is a problem in the internet created by Munna fanboys, these people wanted Munna and is descendants to be the largest tigers.
They always spread the rumor that Umarpani is the largest tiger in Kanha, in India etc thats why this confusion.
Umarpani is a big tiger but its nowhere as big as these fanboys claim him to be. Umarpani male as a cub was a smaller cat compared to his brother.

When it comes to size, Kingfisher is taller, longer and as a bigger chest girth than Umarpani.
It can be seen clearly in that video when they are side by side.
Here are some shots from the clip for clarification.

Kingfisher in the back and Umarpani in front


*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




Kingfisher right and Umarpani left


*This image is copyright of its original author



*This image is copyright of its original author




Here is the picture of Kingfisher's dead body. Just to give a perpective of his size.


*This image is copyright of its original author
 

Bheema got his name for his huge size and he dwarfed his brother when they were growing together.
Regarding Bheema and Umarpani, there was a video released sometime back where Bheema follows Umarpani and Umarpani moving away from Bheema.
In that video Bheema was way taller and longer than Umarpani. Unfortunately that video was removed from internet.
I think I might have that clip in my archives need to check.
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United States Pckts Offline
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( This post was last modified: 01-22-2020, 06:48 PM by Pckts )

Perfect example of how angles are deceptive

*This image is copyright of its original author

Here Umas head size is larger, KF is angled perpendicular to the shot while Uma is diagonally faced to the shot with his body further away from the camera and his feet are lower.

Here while both are standing, Uma looks like the larger cat

*This image is copyright of its original author

But again, angles play a role in perception.

With all do respect, the so called "fan-boys" consist of Naren Malik *who filmed their fight* and Sharad Kumar Vats, both of whom have actually seen all these tigers many times, they're opinion holds far more weight than anyone else who hasn't seen them.

It is true that Uma's brother was said to be larger than he was and Bajrang is said to be similar size as Bheem from a few I've seen comment on them and Bajrang isn't nearly as impressive as Umarpani though.
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Here is BMW's son who was young at this time and said to be 225kg for comparison to KF

*This image is copyright of its original author


KF

*This image is copyright of its original author
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Bheema and DJ




Uma and DJ

*This image is copyright of its original author
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