Tiger Tale

来源 :Beijing Review | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:qweewqqwe123
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  


   It was over in 4 seconds. Before anyone could quite comprehend what had happened, it struggled, it fell, it flew and they leaped, almost in unison, a whirling, growling mass of orange stripes and gleaming white fangs. The symphony of snarls rose to a pitch. There was a sudden plaintive bleat and a final wrenching snap. The sound then fell to a low mechanical growl as a scrum of 10-foot felines fought over the scraps.
  Those of us who witnessed the scene were left in stunned silence, flickers of remorse on faces still gleaming with adrenalin and elation.
  We had transgressed, we had abandoned the mores of modern carbon footprint conscious civilization; we had just fed a live goat to a pack of Siberian tigers.
  This was no dream sequence but a Tuesday morning in China’s freezing far north.
  Weeks earlier, we were informed that a tiger sanctuary in Harbin afforded visitors the primal privilege of flinging unfortunate creatures, specifically goats, to the world’s largest cats. But we initially dismissed this information as scarcely credible.
  While the world abounds with dubious zoological gardens and sanctuaries the previous highlight of my morally questionable animal encounters was feeding a chicken to a half starved reptile at a Thai crocodile farm.
  In fact, China is actually home to the world’s largest population of tigers. India’s tiger reserves, Bangladesh’s Sunderbans, Borneo and Sumatra actually house fewer of the great cats than the Middle Kingdom.
  This might seem hard to believe given the generally poor state of China’s natural environment but of course the tigers aren’t wild, rather they are captive remnants from an interesting Chinese scheme: tiger farms.
  It is well known that the use of various parts of a tiger’s anatomy in traditional Chinese medicine is one of the principal causes for the decline of the creatures in the wild. But what is less well known is that in the 1980s China trialed a novel solution to the tiger trade problem—raising tigers in farms.
  The cats breed easily in captivity and farms, the logic went, would eliminate the need for poaching wild specimens. This seemed a sensible scheme. But the idea that everyone’s favorite furry felines were being battery-farmed didn’t go down too well in the West and under growing pressure, the tiger trade was officially banned in China in 1993.
  In a bid to stave off bankruptcy, the country’s dozen or so tiger farms then performed rather radical policy reversals, re-branded themselves as tiger sanctuaries, and found that living tigers could be just as lucrative as dead ones.
  It brings us to the Harbin Songhua Siberian Tiger Reserve where 90 yuan($14.17) gets you a tour, in a reinforced bus, through vast pens of freely roaming tigers.
  High metal gates, towering double fences, an abundance of razor wire and enormous predators that prowl to within an inch of your vehicle; the experience is as close as you can get to Jurassic Park without the aid of Hollywood.
  The tigers saunter through a reasonably natural environment: There are dense thickets of foliage, mature trees, and occasional piles of snow.
  During the 30-minute tour we got to see the great cats lounging, roaming, mating, playing, fighting and even spraying our bus with pungent liquid from dubiously placed scent glands—the one thing they didn’t seem to be doing however, was eating.
  As the tour came to an end there was no sign of the carnage we had been told to expect. No dismembered carcasses, no thrilling chases, the rumors of feedings it seemed had indeed been exaggerated.
  But just as we were about to reconcile ourselves to a carnage-free tiger tour we were piled out of our bus and marched through a grim warren of raised concrete until we reached the reserve’s piece de resistance; a sunken, circular pit somewhat larger than a tennis court, where we could observe two dozen especially large, hungry-looking tigers from a barely elevated platform.
  The scent of death and the leftovers from half a dozen previous meals made the purpose of the place immediately apparent. In the corner of this big cat cauldron an old woman vendor stood next to a sign advertising chickens 60 yuan ($9.45), turkeys 120 yuan($18.90).
  We saw the birds disappear in momentary puffs of feathers and blood but we wanted more. We wanted a goat, and after the obligatory haggling a price was fixed. A few minutes later the arena’s predatory funk was pierced by a single bleat; a lamb snow white, and hardly larger than a spaniel, was quite literally being led to slaughter.
  Dragged through the concrete corridor, reeling at the smell of so many snarling predators our offering to the gods of pure wanton amusement was given a momentary reprieve as tasteless photographs were snapped. The goat was then hoisted up to an undersized hatch... poised above a pack of smacked lips and snapping jaws and then....
  It was over in 4 seconds.
其他文献
As an office worker on Jinbao Street, one of the most bustling business areas in Beijing, Su Wei is accustomed to bringing his lunches to the office in polystyrene boxes.  “My colleagues and I all eat
期刊
In its latest trade dispute with China, the United States seems to be following Don Quixote’s lead: viciously attacking windmills that it perceives to be a giant threat to itself.  On January 18, the
期刊
A troubling case of poisoning in April left the student body of Shanghai’s prestigious Fudan University paralyzed with grief.  On April 16, Huang Yang, a 28-year-old third-year medical student in the
期刊
China’s consumer price index (CPI), a barometer of inflation, grew 4.5 percent year on year in January, up from 4.1 percent in December 2011, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics.
期刊
Open any medicine cabinet in America or other Western countries and an assortment of bottles is sure to fall out. Tylenol and pain relievers, sleep aids, syrups to battle the common cold and multivita
期刊
“Please help me donate my corneas if I cannot come back,” volunteer Peng Jie, 44, texted his friend at 1:58 p.m. on April 20 when he was on the way to helping with earthquake relief work in Lushan Cou
期刊
Wu Xiaoqiu, a Beijing resident, clicked the “submit” button when he finished the questionnaire about the topics on the 2012 sessions of the National People’s Congress and the National Committee of the
期刊
China’s Central Government is trying to open more sectors to private investment in a bid to harness its vigor for economic development.  The country has at least 20 trillion-30 trillion yuan ($3.18 tr
期刊
Zhang Guangzhu and his wife Wang Zhongjin have set foot on every continent, even Antarctica. In their global escapades they’ve filled five passports with travel visas and customs stamps from more than
期刊
While people are still thrilled by scenes of the destruction of the Earth in the movie 2012, scientists are finding ways to explain the reasons for past extinctions, which can serve as a warning for t
期刊