HookMeUpII
AH fanatic
I just finished listening to JH Patterson's Maneaters of Tsavo (and other African Adventures) on Spotify. First off, great book. Seems to go in chronological order of events. The Tsavo happenings are about 30-40% of the book and the rest is Patterson's adventures in-country concurrently and thereafter. Seems like the maneater occurrences happened just as he arrived in country.
So the burning question I have: Were man-eating cats really that big of an issue back in the turn of the 20th century and such? Why don't we have these issues now?
The book addresses the man-eating pair, but in his mentioning after, there were several other problematic lions in various locales. Wasn't like it just the two old, exiled/injured males had their fun.
Interestingly enough, the Indian tiger, Chimpawat, killed about 400 souls around that time in India/Nepal as well. I am currently in the middle of "No Beast so Fierce." Jim Corbett is the savior there. That tiger apparently had a poacher bullet in it which rendered it injured.
I just can't seem to understand how these issues don't present themselves currently? Maybe it was just the influx of Europeans back then was so new and created crowding? Maybe we know enough now? Are we just smarter to not get eaten?
So the burning question I have: Were man-eating cats really that big of an issue back in the turn of the 20th century and such? Why don't we have these issues now?
The book addresses the man-eating pair, but in his mentioning after, there were several other problematic lions in various locales. Wasn't like it just the two old, exiled/injured males had their fun.
Interestingly enough, the Indian tiger, Chimpawat, killed about 400 souls around that time in India/Nepal as well. I am currently in the middle of "No Beast so Fierce." Jim Corbett is the savior there. That tiger apparently had a poacher bullet in it which rendered it injured.
I just can't seem to understand how these issues don't present themselves currently? Maybe it was just the influx of Europeans back then was so new and created crowding? Maybe we know enough now? Are we just smarter to not get eaten?