adityadickysingh 🇮🇳 Profile picture
Sep 28, 2021 14 tweets 7 min read Read on X
Meet a tigress called Arrowhead from Ranthambhore. This picture is from 2015 when she was still a cub. Her brother Pac-Man is running behind -(I named him after a Pac-Man video game mark on his head). It’s story time
Arrowhead, Pac-Man and another sister called Lightning were born to a legendary tigress called Krishna or T19 her official number, in early 2014. The four of them crossing the ‘land bridge’ on Rajbagh lake here in summers of 2014
By the year 2016 Arrowhead had established her range around the lakes - an area gifted to her by Krishna who captured a new territory and had another litter there. The lakes were no Arrowhead’s
She bonded with this young and very shy male numbered T 86 officially. This one and by 2017 they were mating regularly
By the end of 2018 Arrowhead had a litter of two cubs but they didn’t survive beyond the age of a few months. In early 2019 she had another litter of (we later came to know) of two cubs. In end Feb we saw them for this first time here
During the next few months till the end of June 2019 when the Ranthambhore national park shuts for monsoons I had a blast visually documenting their lives. It’s special feeling to document cubs of tigers whose grandparents were cubs when I started. Blessed indeed
I shoot with a 4 camera set up & usually go the park with my core team. This is how we shoot and this is what we get consistently. I am not the best around but I am consistent and I give it time - decades kind of time. My Ranthambhore photography project started in 1999.
One of my drivers Bhaiya wanted me to name these two cubs Riddhi & Siddhi cause he is a big follower of Ganeshji but we needed to justify the names as I usually name them after a facial mark. So this is Riddhi - I see the Hindi letter र inverted over her right eye. Don’t laugh🙂
And this is Siddh. I am afraid she doesn’t have any mark to brand with the name. I can ID them from a lot of markings but none scream her name to me. Little did I know then that I would be following these two amazing sisters called @RiddhiB9 & @SiddhiBhandari - 🙏
In the end of June 2019 the park shut for 3 monsoon months. It’s scary because the three month gap can sometimes kill the story you are documenting. Once the park reopened in October our story started again and till the lockdown I was busy seeing them grow.
By March 2020 their play fights we’re getting into more of fights and less of play. That’s how they start till they finally separate. Then disaster struck the planet and everything locked down. My story was turning out to be a disaster ☹️
Then in June 2020 the park opened up again for a couple of weeks. There were hardly any visitors and we were on. Amazingly on the first day that I went looking for them after the park reopened, I found all three waiting on the main road to the park. Tigers of Ranthambhore like me
On June 2020 the fights between them we’re getting rough. All three were fighting as Arrowhead was mating again and wanted them to stay away from her.
This was the last time in June 2020 that I saw all three together. I haven’t been going to the park regularly since then and I don’t really have regular pictures of them to tell the story after that. But they live separately and their mother has another litter of two cubs.

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More from @adityadickysin

Sep 21, 2022
Introduction not a reintroduction. We are not “reintroducing” a species that went extinct recently in India, instead we are “introducing” an alien predator in a habitat where they never ever existed.
I am not convinced that there was a wild population of cheetahs in India, that went extinct recently. There would have been cheetahs in Baluchistan but not in the present day India, at least not in the last few centuries.
Thousands of cheetahs were imported from Central Asia and Africa by the rich in India for over a 1000 years, mostly to be trained as “hunting leopards” for hunting or to be hunted down themselves
Read 24 tweets
Sep 13, 2022
Cheetahs - an Introduction or Reintroduction. India’s Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 forbids the introduction of exotic species to India’s wilds, even if they are genetically close to their Indian subspecies. It is illegal to even provide them with wild prey in captivity.
The cheetahs that we are getting are captive bred African cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus jubatus), a different sub species (or genetically different) from the Asiatic cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus venaticus). Therefore, it’s being called a “Reintroduction’ because Introduction is illegal
“Assessing the potential for reintroducing the cheetah in India”, a report from 2010 claims that 27 cheetahs could be sustained in the 347 sq. km of Kuno Wildlife Sanctuary. Kuno was a sanctuary at the time and half the present-day size of Kuno National Park.
Read 14 tweets
Aug 26, 2022
05:11 pm Ranthambhore 23rd June 2022 - A tigress called Laila in Bhakola valley. We saw her sitting in a pool of water behind some bushes about half an hour ago. They s was the third or fourth picture I took, after she got up and started walking.
She crossed to our jeep’s left to spray mark a tree and then walked into a narrow entrance to a valley that widen up ahead. We drove on to park at where we thought we might catch up with her - a beautiful setting that tigers normally avoid.
Normally avoid - but today was an exception. I love these Rock formations and couldn’t believe she was walking through them.
Read 8 tweets
Aug 19, 2022
Let me show you some ancient architecture from Ranthambhore national park on #WorldPhotographyDay
This building, same as the one in the previous picture, is known as the Choti (or small) Chattri, so called because there is a larger one nearby called (not very creatively) Badi (or big) chattri. It’s basically a elevated, dome-shaped pavilion with a Shivling under it
Then there is this one very close to Choti Chattri. The platform is still there but not the rest.
Read 13 tweets
Jun 29, 2022
Been on safaris in Ranthambhore for two weeks now. When I started it was hot & the forest was dry. Hardly an colours except in the few evergreen groves along permanent water sources. Pictures had a brown background
Two days later it rained for a few hours which is a lot for us here. That totally transformed the forest. Water became available all over so the animals scattered across the forest. They now didn’t need to stay close to water holes. Water is everywhere
Once the predominant tree here - Anogeissus pendula or Dhonk as we call it locally - turns green, the number of animals that one sees in the lower reaches goes down drastically but the background becomes very interestingly green.
Read 6 tweets
Jun 3, 2022
I am not good with written words. Languages were my worst subjects throughout. A 🧵 on pretty #nature pictures with no frills captions.

1. Tiger sleeping in a Chattri
2. Dancing Wildebeest
3. Trees in a storm
Read 10 tweets

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