How the tigress's were able to synchronize their estrus 
						cycles to within hours of each other, remains a mystery. 
						If the synchronized estrus was a mystery, the 
						synchronized births remain an even bigger mystery.
						At 100 days into their pregnancies, I separated the two 
						tigresses, Shadow and Julie, into separate enclosures 
						where they would be free from the males.
						The reference books stated tigers gestation period to be 
						103 days. Day and night I monitored the two tigresses, 
						concerned that the births might occur in the dead of 
						night.
						Day number 103 came and went and nothing happened, 
						perhaps the reference books were wrong. Lions gestation 
						can go as long as 112 days.
						At 10 o'clock on the morning of the 104th day, Shadow 
						went into labour and I positioned myself outside the 
						den.
						I had seen a female leopard give birth standing, so in 
						my mind the tigress would stand and give birth, the cub 
						coming head first. How wrong I was. The first cub was 
						born with the tigress lying down, and I was taken 
						completely by surprise and missed the birth completely.
						Shadow bit the umbilical cord, ate the afterbirth and 
						cleaned the membrane off the cub with her rough tongue. 
						For a tigress giving birth to her first litter, she was 
						doing surprisingly well.
						As I placed the cub in front of her, she thanked me with 
						a continuous "chuffing" sound. I replied that was a 
						pleasure to be of assistance in my best tiger language. 
						Relieved I was still in one piece, I left the den. 
					
						Rather like a young crocodile has a egg tooth on its 
						snout to break open the egg, the tiger cub has razor 
						sharp claws. Once again mother nature had taken care of 
						the smallest detail.
						It occurred to me that the other births I have filmed, 
						Wildebeest, Zebra, Topi, Impala and Thompson's Gazelle, 
						all occurred in the midmorning. The theory put forward 
						is that this is when predators are least active.
						Could it be that the tiger is synchronized to give birth 
						when rival predators are least active.
						A nomadic male tiger, a hyena, a dhole (wild dog), lions 
						and leopards in previous times could all threaten tiger 
						cubs
					Shadow, exhausted after three births, lay down on top of the 
					cub, unaware that it was underneath her. How do I warn her, 
					I tried English, I "chuffed", I cursed, I swore. Amazingly 
					and unknowingly, I was now right in the den right next to 
					her, but helpless to rectify the situation.
					The cub had the membrane over its head, the nostrils were 
					blocked it was gasping for air through its mouth. There was 
					no ways it could survive the weight of the tigress and then 
					like a piece of soap it slipped out from under her body.
					Shadow gave an exhausted chuff and I replied with 
					congratulations. Tigress and human in a moment of time, 
					experiencing the miracle of birth together. Certainly one of 
					the most magical moments of my life and probably hers as 
					well.
When I think of the births of my own children, with 
					gynecologists and mid wives in attendance, the tiger birth 
					had seemed so uncomplicated, so easy, so natural.
Human beings now number more than 6 billion while maybe 
					1000 tigers remain in the wilds. Worse still, there seems to 
					be no plan so save them.
After a fourth cub was born, lying down, I raced across 
					to Julie to see if she wasn't perhaps giving birth as well.
					
Julie was fast asleep, so I lay down exhausted and slept 
					next to her. When I woke up several hours later, my first 
					reaction was she has had the cubs and I have been asleep and 
					missed the birth completely. Fortunately no births had 
					occurred and no cubs appeared during the night. 
The next morning Julie was extremely stressed out. She 
					was pacing up and down, trying to get to all the tigers that 
					stood outside her enclosure. All of them were thin. It was 
					obvious to me that they had not killed anything for a week 
					or more.
I gave Julie some meat, she immediately took the meat to 
					the tigers and indicated to me she wanted them to have it.
Julie's behavior was certainly not like a tigress about 
					to give birth. She continuously talked to the tigers outside 
					the enclosure. I would have given anything to have 
					understood this conversation. 
I was confused, why would she want to give birth to cubs 
					in an area where there were males who were not the father of 
					her cubs and would kill them on sight.
Then suddenly, at 10 o'clock, the same time as Shadow had 
					produced cubs a day earlier, she went into a thicket and in 
					rapid succession, produced 3 cubs, one of which was white.
					
The den site was most unsuitable, on sloping ground with 
					a river running through the bottom of the den. It was 
					obvious to me that Julie had paid no attention in selecting 
					the den site.
The first cub rolled down the slope and nearly drowned. 
					Despite its distress calls, Julie did nothing. I brought the 
					cub back to her, but there was no response.
After resting for an hour, she got up and abandoned the 
					cubs never to return, despite their distress calls. 
On releasing her back to the hungry tigers, an amazing 
					greeting scene continued for well over an hour and then all 
					the tigers disappeared to go hunting.
I spent a long time analyzing her behavior and came to 
					the following conclusion:
I had always believed that it was young inexperienced 
					leopards or tigers that, when producing their first litters, 
					would abandon them. I now think differently. If a leopard or 
					a tigress is physically down in condition, or if 
					environmental factors are against her, she will abandon.
Just like human mothers will terminate an unwanted 
					pregnancy, so too will tigresses do the same.
I know that Julie is a good and caring mother, then why 
					would she abandon?
The answer lies in the fact that to raise 3 cubs is a 
					huge physical commitment and a time consuming exercise. 
					Tigresses must spend 80% of their time in the early weeks in 
					the den with the cubs. 
Julie's reasoning is that she is the main hunter for the 
					tigers at Tiger Canyons. Without her, the other tigers 
					aren't coping. She is needed to hunt to ensure the survival 
					of the other tigers. She cannot raise cubs and be a hunter 
					at the same time, so she sacrifices the cubs.
Julie also knows that Shadow is having cubs. The father 
					of those cubs is Ron who is her brother. Therefore Julie has 
					a genetic investment in those cubs. It makes sense to let 
					Shadow raise the cubs and commit the time, while Julie 
					spends her energy and time on hunting.
Tiger cubs are expendable. In the wilds, 30% never reach 
					adulthood. If conditions improve, Julie will come back in 
					estrus almost immediately and in 105 days can produce 
					another litter of cubs.
I was faced with a situation of three abandoned tiger 
					cubs, one of which was white, the first white cub born at 
					Tiger Canyons. 
But we are primates, emotional, "clever", dominant. When 
					I posed the question to a group of people at Tiger Canyons, 
					not one said "let the abandoned cubs die". 
The white cub has mystical, religious and financial 
					connotations. Could white cubs be relocated into wild 
					tigress litters one day, helping to save the species? Could 
					the white cub be sold to a zoo or even hunted one day as 
					trophy for a vast sum of money? Money that could be 
					re-invested into tiger conservation? 
Julie thinks unemotional survival for herself and the 
					other tigers. John Varty thinks emotionally and by 
					necessity, financially. I would venture that under the 
					circumstances, the tigress Julie is cleverer than I am.
Tiger Canyons desperately needs to fence off more land 
					for the increasing tigers. This land needs to be stocked 
					with suitable prey. This is very expensive to say the least.
If the authorities will allow me to create another tiger 
					sanctuary, I know I can save indigenous forests and river 
					catchments in the province of Mpumalanga. This too will take 
					huge amounts of money.
As far as I know, Tiger Canyons has the only expanding, 
					free ranging tiger population in the world. It needs new 
					destinations to relocate surplus tigers.
I need to create new tiger populations in the hands of 
					private individuals, not governments who have failed so 
					dismally to protect them. 
The rising global tourism, is the key to providing the 
					money to conserve the majestic tiger. People will come from 
					all over the world to view, appreciate and photograph this 
					magnetic creature.
The week I spent recording the births of two litters from 
					two tigresses, was extraordinary to say the least.
In summary, I was able to get into the tiny confines of a 
					den with a wild tigress while she gave birth. Later I walked 
					with her as she carried a cub to a new den site.
I observed Tigress Julie take her meat and offer it to 
					other tigers as she vainly tried to communicate with me that 
					she wanted to be with them. Here I failed dismally to 
					understand what she was trying to convey to me.
On a TV monitor linked to a surveillance camera, I 
					watched Tigress Shadow stand over her cubs like an umbrella, 
					sheltering them from the rain in a huge electrical storm.
I saw a tigress meticulously remove the sand and mucous 
					from a cubs nostrils, allowing it to breathe freely seconds 
					after birth.
I experienced an exhausted, emotional thank you from 
					Tigress Shadow after I had brought a wayward tiger cub back 
					into the den.
I will never forget the blank stare, the penetrating gaze 
					from Tigress Julie when I returned a near drowned cub to her 
					which she did not want. I got the distinct feeling that she 
					felt I was intruding into a situation I did not understand.
					
I experienced extreme anger at the human species, 
					especially those that were blessed with tigers in their 
					countries, that we have allowed this magnificent creature to 
					almost slip to extinction.
Tigers are far more intelligent than we think. They have 
					the ability to reason, weigh up options and take decisions. 
					They are decisive in their actions. 
At Tiger Canyons and perhaps elsewhere, they understand 
					that their very survival is at the whim of human beings. It 
					is an unenviable situation to be in.
They instinctively understand, which we don't, that the 
					land and hence the prey, is limited and to keep adding more 
					tigers, decreases their chances of survival.
In short, we human beings would do well to take heed that 
					our continued expansion of our species on a finite planet, 
					cannot continue for much longer.
It has been a privilege for me to live with this 
					magnificent creature, the tiger.
This last week will live with me forever. 
Tread lightly on the Earth.
					JV